Literature DB >> 20568063

[Infantile convulsions with mild gastroenteritis: epidemiological and clinical characteristics and outcome].

Teodoro Durá-Travé1, María Eugenia Yoldi-Petri, Teresa Molins-Castiella, Silvia Souto-Hernández, Sergio Aguilera-Albesa.   

Abstract

AIM: To analyse the epidemiological, clinical and developmental characteristics of a group of children with seizures associated with mild gastroenteritis in order to facilitate the diagnostic suspicion of the condition in daily clinical practice. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We conducted a retrospective review of the medical records of 24 patients who were admitted to hospital between January 2001 and December 2008 because they presented seizures associated with mild gastroenteritis: epidemiological, clinical and developmental data were collected.
RESULTS: The mean age at diagnosis was 18.1 months. The female/male ratio was 2.8. The interval between the gastro-enteritis and the seizure was 3.8 days. The mean rectal temperature in the seizure was 37.1 degrees C. The mean number of seizures per hospitalisation was 2.2. Seizures were brief (90.6% < or = 5 min) and 96.8% of them were recorded as generalised. Rotavirus antigenemia in faeces was positive in 55.2% of cases. Lab findings, including the cerebrospinal fluid study, were normal. The electroencephalogram, in an immediate post-seizure situation, showed generalised and/or focal paroxysmal activity in four patients. The mean follow-up time was 4.2 years. The mean age of the group is currently 5.7 years, with normal development and level of schooling. Five patients (20.8%) had recurrences coinciding with new bouts of gastroenteritis. One patient, with a history of maternal epilepsy, was later diagnosed with focal epilepsy, and whether it can be related with the earlier presentation of seizures associated with mild gastroenteritis or not is debatable. CONCLUSIONS; Seizures in children associated with mild gastroenteritis are a well-differentiated convulsive syndrome. Prognosis is excellent, but a relatively important percentage of cases tend to have recurrences if there is a new diarrhoeic process.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20568063

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Rev Neurol        ISSN: 0210-0010            Impact factor:   0.870


  2 in total

1.  Gastroenteritis Related Seizure with or without Fever: Comparison Clinical Features and Serum Sodium Level.

Authors:  Farhad Heydarian; Elham Bakhtiari; Shima Badzaee; Mohammad Heidarian
Journal:  Iran J Child Neurol       Date:  2019

2.  Elevated Serum Uric Acid in Benign Convulsions with Mild Gastroenteritis in Children.

Authors:  Il Han Yoo; Woojoong Kim; Jaeso Cho; Hunmin Kim; Byung Chan Lim; Hee Hwang; Jong Hee Chae; Jieun Choi; Ki Joong Kim
Journal:  J Clin Neurol       Date:  2019-10       Impact factor: 3.077

  2 in total

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