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1.
Cureus ; 12(7): e9194, 2020 Jul 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32821551

ABSTRACT

Introduction Epilepsy is a burdensome disorder for affected individuals and community. There is limited data available on the epidemiological aspects of seizures in Pakistan and further research is necessary. We aimed to fill this gap by studying this information in epilepsy patients presenting to our neurology department. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the causes and types of seizures among the target population. Method This is a cross-sectional study conducted at the Department of Neurology, Dr. Ruth K.M. Pfau Civil Hospital Karachi. In this study we evaluated the causes and types of seizures among patients presenting to our department during the two-year study duration (January 2018-December 2019). Informed consent was taken. Detailed history was taken including features of seizure episodes, age at first seizure, family history and comorbid conditions. Relevant investigations were carried out. The data was compiled to deduce the relevant information using SPSS v20.0. T-test and Chi-square were used for analyzing the data. Results A total of 996 patients presented during the study duration. Primary seizures were found in 58% cases while secondary seizures were found in 42% cases. This distribution was more equal in children with 49.6% primary seizures and 50.4% secondary seizures; the gap widened in adults with 64.3% primary seizures and 35.7% secondary seizures. The most common cause of secondary seizures was neonatal encephalopathy which was present in 18.7% patients, followed by traumatic head injury in 18.2% patients. Central nervous system (CNS) infection was the cause in 17.9% patients, cerebral tumors in 14.1% patients, stroke in 11.5%, metabolic encephalopathy in 7.4%, febrile seizures in 6.5% and CNS malformations in 5.7% patients. The top three causes in children were neonatal encephalopathy (28.3%), CNS infections (19.3%) and febrile seizures (12.7%). Adults with secondary seizures were diagnosed most often with head trauma (25.2%), cerebral tumors (19.9%) and stroke (18.4%) as causative factors. The most common type of seizures was generalized onset tonic-clonic seizures which was found in 73.0% patients followed by focal to bilateral tonic-clonic seizures in 8.9% patients. Other types of seizures included focal aware seizures in 5.0%, mixed seizure types in 4.2%, focal impaired awareness seizures in 3.1%, absence seizures in 2.7%, myoclonic seizures in 2.0% and atonic seizures in 1.0% patients. Seizures in children were mostly generalized onset tonic-clonic seizures (75.4%), mixed seizure types (5.7%) and focal to bilateral tonic-clonic seizures (5.2%). In adults the three most common types corresponded to the overall result: generalized onset tonic-clonic seizures (71.2%), focal to bilateral tonic-clonic seizures (11.6%) and focal aware seizures (6.6%). Conclusion We found that the most common cause of seizures overall in our study population was primary seizures, though primary and secondary seizures were more evenly present in children. Among secondary causes neonatal encephalopathy stood out as the most common cause in children; head trauma was the predominant cause in adults. Most common type of seizures overall and in adults was generalized onset tonic-clonic seizures, followed by focal to bilateral tonic-clonic and focal aware seizure types. Pediatric patients presented most often with generalized onset tonic-clonic seizures, followed by mixed seizure types and focal to bilateral tonic-clonic seizures.

2.
Article in Chinese | WPRIM (Western Pacific) | ID: wpr-752193

ABSTRACT

Objective: To evaluate the clinical effects of combination of traditional Chinese and Western medicine in the treatment of primary epilepsy. Methods: The China Journal Full-text Database, science and Technology Journal Full-text Database, Wanfang database, PubMed database, EMbase were searched on the treatment of primary epilepsy literature combining traditional Chinese and Western medicine, and the system evaluation and meta-analysis were performed.Results: A total of 11 studies with 951 cases of primary epilepsy were included in the randomized controlled trial. The meta-analysis showed that the clinical effects of treatment of epilepsy group with combination of TCM and Western Medicine (RR=1.18, 95% CI: 1.07-1.29, P < 0.01), incidence frequency (WMD =-0.98, 95% CI: 1.56-0.40), electrocardiogram improvement rate (RR=1.28, 95% CI: 1.11-1.47, P < 0.01) were significantly better than western medicine treatment (control group) . Conclusion: The effects of combined traditional Chinese and Western Medicine on primary epilepsy based on the method of latent town collaterals is superior to that of pure western medicine.

3.
Article in Chinese | WPRIM (Western Pacific) | ID: wpr-640167

ABSTRACT

Objective To comparison of the quality of life in children with migraine and quality of life in children with primary epilepsy(EP)or Tourette's syndrome(TS).Methods There were 239 children with moderate migraine,the time of which lasted from 6 to 36(12.14?4.67)months,headache index 4-20(9.98?3.74).There were 250 cases and 424 cases with EP or TS,respectively,both team members were under good control with single drug therapy,the diagnosed according to the international classification of headache disorders-Ⅱ.The pediatric quality of life inventory,version 4.0,age 8-12 years,and child report forms were used to evaluate the quality of life in children with migraine and the other two kinds of samples by Bonferroni and Mann-Whitney tests.Results The scores of quality of life in children with moderate migraine were lower than those in children with EP(total score 69.06?10.48 vs 81.26?13.80;physical function scores 67.43?14.37 vs 83.14?14.70;psychological function scores 69.92?10.56 vs 80.26?14.32;emotional function scores 66.76?14.09 vs 80.90?18.93;social function scores 76.81?14.67 vs 83.36?17.40;school function scores 66.20?13.62 vs 76.52?13.80).The scores of quality of life in children with moderate migraine were lower than those in children with TS(total scores 69.06?10.48 vs 79.18?11.45;physical function scores 67.43?14.37 vs 81.52?12.61;psychological function scores 69.92?10.56 vs 77.90?12.28;emotional function scores 66.76?14.69 vs 74.07?16.34;social function scores 76.81?14.07 vs 89.06?16.23;school function scores 66.20?13.62 vs 70.35?16.96).Two sets of data between children with moderate migraine and those with EP,TS showed statistical significance(Pa

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