Literature DB >> 2126416

Epilepsy and other convulsive disorders in Saudi Arabia: a prospective study of 1,000 consecutive cases.

S al-Rajeh1, A Abomelha, A Awada, O Bademosi, H Ismail.   

Abstract

The pattern of epilepsy and other convulsive disorders in 1,000 consecutive Saudi nationals is described. These disorders were common with a hospital frequency rate of 8 per 1,000. Men were more frequently affected than women and 60% of the patients were under 10 years old at the onset of their illness. The epilepsies were the commonest type (74%). Febrile convulsions (20%) presented mainly between the ages of one and five years. Isolated seizures (3%) and acute symptomatic convulsions (3%) were uncommon. In the epileptic group, generalised seizures (71%) were more frequent than partial (29%) and complex partial seizures occurred mainly in those above 21 years old. Absences (4%), infantile spasms (3%) and atonic seizures (3%) were uncommon. No specific etiology of the epilepsy was determined in the majority of the cases (63%). The identified major etiologic factors of the epilepsies were perinatal encephalopathy (21%), cerebral trauma (11%), sequelae of meningitis or encephalitis (2%), brain tumors (0.5%), and vascular lesions such as stroke and arteriovenous malformation. Perinatal encephalopathy accounted for 40% of the epilepsies in children less than 5 years old, and trauma for 20% of those above 20 years old. A family history of epilepsy in close relations was obtained in 23% of the cases, and the consanguinity rate among the parents was 53%. The high incidence of associated perinatal encephalopathy found in this study suggests that perinatal factors play a major role in the pathogenesis of epilepsy in Saudi Arabia. The high frequency of cerebral trauma was also striking. Although consanguinity of the parents appeared not to be a major factor in the genetics of convulsive disorders in this environment, it might have potentiated the tendency of familial aggregation of convulsive disorders in this community. Consanguinity may be an important factor in the production of some of these disorders but its precise role has not been determined.

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Year:  1990        PMID: 2126416     DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0404.1990.tb03313.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acta Neurol Scand        ISSN: 0001-6314            Impact factor:   3.209


  8 in total

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3.  Epilepsy awareness in Saudi Arabia.

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5.  Electroencephalography findings in childhood epilepsy in a Saudi population: Yield, pattern and determinants of abnormality.

Authors:  Lukman F Owolabi; AbdulRazeq A Reda; Raafat E Ahmed; Okezie O Enwere; Bappa Adamu; Mushabab AlGhamdi
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6.  Epilepsy surgery series: a study of 502 consecutive patients from a developing country.

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7.  Type and etiology of pediatric epilepsy in Jordan. A multi-center study.

Authors:  Abdelkarim A Al-Qudah; Abla Albsoul-Younes; Amira T Masri; Samah K AbuRahmah; Ibrahim A Alabadi; Omar A Nafi; Lubna F Gharaibeh; Amer A Murtaja; Lina H Al-Sakran; Haya A Arabiat; Abdallah A Al-Shorman
Journal:  Neurosciences (Riyadh)       Date:  2017-10       Impact factor: 0.906

8.  Study of electroencephalography in people with generalized epilepsy in a Saudi population.

Authors:  Lukman Femi Owolabi; AbdulRazeq Ahmed Reda; Raafat El Sayed; Dina Fares Mohamed Morsy; Okezie Oguamanam Enwere; Uchechukwu Agbese Mba; Bappa Adamu; Mushabab AlGhamdi
Journal:  J Community Hosp Intern Med Perspect       Date:  2020-10-29
  8 in total

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