| Literature DB >> 21577358 |
Rita Nguyen1, José F Téllez Zenteno.
Abstract
Currently, there is intense clinical research into various aspects of the medical risks relating to epilepsy, including total and cause-specific mortality, accidents and injuries in patients with epilepsy and mortality related with seizures. Seizures occurring in precarious situations and resulting in injuries are still an important concern for patients with epilepsy, their employers and their care-givers. Submersion injuries, motor vehicle accidents, burns, and head injuries are among the most feared epilepsy-related injuries. These concerns seem valid because the hallmark of epilepsy, episodic impairment of consciousness and motor control, may occur during interictal EEG epileptiform discharges, even in the absence of a clinical seizure. In addition, psychomotor comorbidity and side effects of antiepileptic drugs may contribute to the risk of injuries in patients with epilepsy. Published risk factors for injuries include the number of antiepileptic drugs, history of generalized seizures, and seizure frequency. In general, epidemiological information about incidence of injuries has been conflicting and sparse. In general, studies focusing on populations with more severe forms of epilepsy tend to report substantially higher risks of injuries than those involving less selected populations. On the other hand, studies based on non-selected populations of people with epilepsy have not shown an increased frequency of injuries in people with epilepsy compared with the general population. Some studies have shown that patients with epilepsy are more frequently admitted to the hospital following an injury. Possible explanations include: more cautious attitude of clinicians toward injuries occurring in the setting of seizures; hospitalization required because of seizures and not to the injuries themselves; and hospitalization driven by other issues, such as comorbidities, which are highly prevalent in patients with epilepsy. Potentially the high rate of hospitalizations could be related with the severity of the injury. This article reviews the best available epidemiological information about injuries, including incidence and risk factors. Also this article reviews information about specific types of injuries such as fractures, burns, concussions, dislocations, etc. Information about accidents in people with epilepsy is also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: epilepsy.; injuries
Year: 2009 PMID: 21577358 PMCID: PMC3093233 DOI: 10.4081/ni.2009.e20
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurol Int ISSN: 2035-8385
Reported injury rates in studies of patients with epilepsy.
| Author | Country/population | Study type | Number of patients | Injury rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nakken and Lossius[ | Norway. Multihandicapped patients with intractable epilepsy | Prospective | 62 cases | 32.3% of patients had seizure-related injuries in a 13-month period |
| Ziegler | Switzerland. Children with epilepsy without motor or mental handicap | Retrospective | 198 cases | 6 injuries during 1,056 person-years |
| Kirby and Sadler[ | Canada. Adults with seizures Presenting to the emergency room | Prospective | 560 cases | Incidence of seizures resulting in injury was 29.5 in 100,000 population |
| Incidence of seizures causing injury or death in the general population was 32.2 in 100,000 population 15% of seizures brought to medical attention resulted in injury or death | ||||
| Wirrell | Canada. Young adults with a history of typical absence epilepsy. Controls were young adults with juvenile Rheumatoid arthritis (JRA) | Retrospective chart review | 59 patients/61 controls | 24.6/100 person-years injury rate for children with AE, compared to 18.7 for children with JRA (P<0.04) |
| Buck | UK. Adults with active epilepsy without severe physical or learning disabilities | Retrospective population-based survey | 696 | 35% sustained a seizure-related injury in the past year |
| Neufeld | Israel. Adults with epilepsy | Retrospective survey | 298 | 30% of patients reported seizure-related injury. This translates to one seizure-related injury every 21 patient-years, and a serious injury once every 64 patient-years |
| Kirsch and Wirrell[ | Canada. Cases were cognitively normal children aged 5–16 with epilepsy attending a pediatric Neurology clinic. Controls were the children’s ‘best friends’ | Retrospective case-control study | 25 cases/25 controls | Injuries in the past year not requiring medical treatment occurred at a median of 1 (25th–75th percentile 0.4) for cases and at a median of 0 (0.5) for controls (P=0.81) 14% of cases had sustained at least 1 injury as a result of a seizure in their lifetime |
| Beghi and Cornaggia[ | Italy, Germany, Holland, England, Portugal, Russia, Estonia, Slovenia. Children ≥5 years and adults, study general hospital and university centers. Healthy controls | Prospective, case-control | 951 cases/909 controls | At 12 months: injury in 17% of cases and 12% of controls At 24 months: injury in 27% of cases and 17% of controls (P<0.0001) |
| Appleton[ | UK. Newly diagnosed children 1–16 years attending one of seven UK hospitals | Prospective | 198 children | 12.6% of children experienced a seizure-related injury before the diagnosis of epilepsy was established. |
| Lawn | USA. Patients diagnosed with epilepsy between 1975 and 1984 | Retrospective chart review | 247 adults | 62 seizure-related injuries identified in 39 patients over 2,714 patient-years of follow-up (16%, one injury in every 44 person-years) |
| Tellez-Zenteno | Canada. Unselected patients with epilepsy in general population. Control was the general population | Retrospective survey | 835 cases, 130,882 controls | 14.9% of persons with epilepsy had an injury causing limitation of normal activities in the past 12 months compared to 13.34% of the general population (P<0.05). This yields an RR of 1.1 (CI95: 0.8–1.4) |
Traffic accidents and seizures.
| Author | Country | Study description | N | Risk of accident | Conclusion of study |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sheth | United States | Analysis of multiple- cause of mortality data files from 1995–1997 | 44.027 fatal crashes/annum (43,884–44,186) | Relative risk for fatal crashes in seizure patients = 8.6/100,000 | 0.2% of fatal crashes in the US related to seizures (1995–1997) Although seizure-related driver fatalities are rare, there is an increased risk of fatal crash for drivers with epilepsy compared to patients with other medical conditions |
| Van der Lugt[ | Netherlands | Analysis of Netherlands police records from January 1, 1959 – December 31, 1968 | 203 traffic accidents suspected to be seizure-related | Rate of seizure-related traffic accidents is 1/10,000 | 155/203 traffic accidents were attributable to seizures |
| Hansotia And Broste[ | United States | Population-based retrospective cohort study | 30,420 subjects with and without epilepsy or diabetes mellitus | Standardized mishap ratios was 1.13 for moving violations (P=0.26) and 1.33 for accidents (P=0.04). | Drivers with epilepsy have slightly increased risks of traffic accidents as compared with unaffected persons. |
| Taylor | UK | Retrospective survey of driving and accident experience by self-completion questionnaire by drivers with a history of epilepsy and non-epileptic drivers as a control. | 16,958 drivers with a previous history of epilepsy 8,888 non-epileptic Drivers | Odds ratio for risk of Accident involvement = 0.95 (CI95% 0.88–1.02) Adjusted relative risk for being involved n an accident resulting in injury is 1.1 (CI95% 0.91–1.3). Adjust odds ratio for risk of serious injuries = 1.37 (CI95% 1.02–1.84) | The acceptability of driving for people with a history of epilepsy should be determined by an acceptable risk of accidents resulting in injury or serious injury rather than overall accident rates. |
| Lings[ | Denmark | Analysis of a 10-year historical cohort register study | 159 patients with epilepsy and 559 matched Controls | Relative accident risk = 7.01 (CI95% 2.18–26.13, P=0.0003) | Drivers with epilepsy are more likely than healthy controls to be treated at a casualty department after having a motor vehicle accident. |
Characteristics of common injuries associated with epilepsy.
| Type of injury | Characteristics | Risk factors |
|---|---|---|
| Head injury/concussion | Most common type of injury among epileptics | Generalized seizures |
| Burns | Majority of burns in epileptic patients occur while carrying out daily routine activities, such as cooking, ironing, blow-drying hair, or bathing | Number of seizures Complex-partial seizures Female gender |
| Fractures | Commonly in the forearm, humerus, or crush injuries in the spine due to violent muscle contractions | Recent diagnosis of epilepsy Age≥45 years |
| Risk highest in the first 1–2 years after diagnosis | Male sex | |
| Anti-epileptic drugs increase fracture risk by reducing bone mineral density by increasing vitamin D catabolism and decreasing calcium absorption through induction of liver enzymes | Generalized seizures AED polypharmacy Institutionalization | |
| Dislocations | Bilateral posterior shoulder dislocations pathognomonic for epilepsy | Generalized seizures |
| Actual incidence of posterior shoulder dislocations is extremely low | Prolonged generalized seizures | |
| Dislocations commonly associated with Hill-Sachs lesions | ||
| Dislocations of hip and TMJ also described | ||
| Motor vehicle accidents | Despite driving restrictions being placed on PWE, the rate of fatal motor vehicle accidents in PWE is low; however, having a seizure disorder increases the likelihood that a person will have an accident while driving. | Short seizure-free intervals Unreliable auras Prior non-seizure related accidents Non-compliance with AEDs |
TMJ: temporomandibular joint. PWE: patient with epilepsy.