| Literature DB >> 26444670 |
George K Serem1, Charles Rjc Newton2,3, Symon M Kariuki4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Acute seizures are a common cause of paediatric admissions to hospitals in Africa, and malaria is an important cause of seizures in endemic areas. Malaria has declined in the past decade whilst neonatal admissions have increased, both which may affect the incidence and phenotypes of acute seizures in African children.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26444670 PMCID: PMC4596303 DOI: 10.1186/s12883-015-0444-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
Definition of phenotypes of acute seizures
| Phenotypes of seizures | Definition |
|---|---|
| Acute seizures | These are seizures that are associated with an acute event such as a febrile illness, acute haemorrhagic stroke, poisoning or electrolyte imbalance. |
| Acute symptomatic seizures | Acute seizures associated with neurological causes e.g. seizures due to malaria or bacterial meningitis. |
| Febrile seizures according to ILAE | Seizures associated with fever (temperature ≥38.5 °C) that occur in a sick child aged between a month to 6 years old, and the cause of fever does not involve the brain. |
| Febrile seizures according NIH | Seizures with fever usually occurring in child aged between 3 months to 6 years in absence of neurological involvement. |
| Overall definition of febrile seizures | Seizures with fever (temperature ≥38.5 °C) that occur in 2-8 % of children aged between 1 month to 6 years and exclude acute symptomatic seizures. |
| Definite prolonged seizures | Seizures that last up to ≥10 minutes, and timing is witnessed by a clinician or nurse. |
| Probable prolonged seizures | Seizures which did not stop after first dose of diazepam or continuing seizures that required second/third line antiepileptic drugs (phenobarbital/phenytoin). |
| Possible prolonged seizures | These are prolonged seizures based on parental history i.e. history of a seizures lasting ≥10 minutes, based on parents or caretakers reported. |
| A history of a child convulsing all the way to hospital for those living at least half a kilometre away. | |
| Overall definition of status epilepticus | Seizures that last ≥30 minutes accompanied by loss of consciousness or intermitted seizures over a period of ≥30 minutes without regaining consciousness in between the seizures. |
| Definite status epilepticus | Seizures fulfilling the definition of status epilepticus as above, but were witnessed/ observed by a clinician or a nurse and the timing is well documented in the child’s clinical notes. |
| Probable status epilepticus | Prolonged or continuing seizures which required the administration of AEDs such as phenobarbital or phenytoin. |
| Possible status epilepticus | A parental/caretakers history of seizures lasting ≥30 min, when the child was not convulsing on admission. |
| A parental/caretakers’ history of child convulsing all the way to hospital for those living at least a kilometre away. | |
| Focal/partial seizures | Seizures localised to or involving one body part e.g. twitching of one side of the facial structures, cycling movements of one limb, Todd’s paresis of one body side and motor deficits involving one side of the body post-ictally. |
| Generalised seizures | Seizures involving the entire body parts. |
| Repetitive seizures | Two or more seizures in the current illness or within 24 hours. |
| Complex seizures | Seizures that have focal, repetitive and/or prolonged (including status epilepticus) features. |
Distribution of social demographic, laboratory and clinical characteristics among children with seizures
| Variable | Complex seizure ( | Simple seizure ( | Total ( | Odds ratio (95 % CI) | p-value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age: median (interquartile range (IQR)) | 28.4 (12.2-51.9) | 27.9 (15.8-44.4) | 28.1 (14.5-47.5) | 1.00 (1.00-1.00) | 0.171 |
| Sex (male) | 711/1263 (56 %) | 856/1486 (58 %) | 1567/2749 (57 %) | 0.95 (0.82-1.10) | 0.489 |
| Clinical signs and symptoms | |||||
| Median respiratory rate (IQR) | 40 (32–50) | 38 (30–47) | 38 (32–48) | 1.02 (1.01-1.02) | <0.001 |
| Median heart rate (IQR) | 149 (128–166) | 152 (134–167) | 150 (132–167) | 1.00 (0.99-1.00) | 0.003 |
| WAZa | −2 (−2 - -1) | −1 (−2 - 0) | −1 (−2 - -1) | 0.97 (0.92-1.03) | 0.379 |
| MUACb | 14.0 (13.0-1.05) | 14.5 (13.5-15.2) | 14.2 (13.0-15.0) | 0.92 (0.89-0.96) | <0.001 |
| Prostration | 513 (41 %) | 293 (20 %) | 806 (29 %) | 2.67 (2.27-3.13) | <0.001 |
| Median temperature °C (IQR) | 38.0 (37.0-39.0) | 38.3 (37.4-39.2) | 38.2 (37.2-39.1) | 0.86 (0.81-0.91) | <0.001 |
| Temperature gradient | 90/1261 (7 %) | 86/1470 (6 %) | 176/2731 (6 %) | 1.24 (0.91-1.68) | 0.173 |
| Laboratory investigations | |||||
| Median Hb levels (IQR) | 10.0 (8.6-11.2) | 10.1 (9.1-11.1) | 10.2 (8.9-11.1) | 1.02 (0.98-1.05) | 0.379 |
| Median glucose levels (IQR) | 4.8 (3.8-6.1) | 4.7 (3.9-5.8) | 4.7 (3.8-5.9) | 1.02 (0.99-1.06) | 0.169 |
| Median sodium levels (IQR) | 134 (130–137) | 134 (132–137) | 134 (131–137) | 0.99 (0.96-1.00) | 0.016 |
| Median potassium levels (IQR) | 3.9 (3.5-4.3) | 3.8 (3.4-4.2) | 3.8 (3.4-4.2) | 1.21 (1.06-1.39) | 0.005 |
| Median BCS (IQR) | 4 (2–5) | 5 (4–5) | 5 (4–5) | 0.71 (0.69-0.76) | <0.001 |
| Median hematocrit (IQR) | 31.3 (27.0-34.6) | 31.5 (28.5-34.1) | 31.4 (27.9-34.3) | 1.00 (0.99-1.02) | 0.375 |
| Median blood oxygen saturation % (IQR) | 98 (95–100) | 99 (97–100) | 98 (96–100) | 0.96 (0.95-0.97) | <0.001 |
| Median mean corpuscular volume (IQR) | 73.4 (66.0-81.0) | 72.0 (65.0-78.0) | 73.0 (65.0-79.0) | 1.02 (1.01-1.03) | <0.001 |
| Median platelets (IQR) | 292.0 (146.5-421.0) | 314.0 (179.0-433.0) | 306.0 (165.0-427.0) | 1.00 (1.00-1.00) | 0.032 |
| Parasite density ≥2.5x103/μL | 318/1263 (25 %) | 344/1486 (23 %) | 622/2749 (39 %) | 1.12 (0.94-1.33) | 0.215 |
| Median parasite density (IQR) | 2976 (0–165880) | 0 (0–50640) | 0 (0–101710) | 1.00 (1.00-1.00) | 0.001 |
| Slide positive for malaria | 377/1060 (36 %) | 383/1332 (29 %) | 760/2392 (38 %) | 1.37 (1.15-1.63) | <0.001 |
| Creatinine | 45 (37–58) | 50 (38–64) | 47 (37–60) | 1.00 (1.00-1.00) | 0.382 |
aWAZ = weight for age; bMUAC = mid-upper arm circumference BCS = Blantyre coma score; CI = confidence interval; IQR = interquartile range
Fig. 1Overlap of phenotypes of seizures over the study period (N = 1263). There was substantial overlap of the three phenotypes of complex seizures namely prolonged, repetitive and/or focal seizures
Possible causes of acute seizures
| Possible cause | Complex seizure | Simple seizure | Overall | p-value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Malaria | 477 (38 %) | 422 (28 %) | 899 (33 %) | <0.001 |
| Respiratory tract infections | 180 (14 %) | 352 (24 %) | 532 (19 %) | <0.001 |
| Fever of unknown origin | 161 (13 %) | 306 (21 %) | 467 (17 %) | <0.001 |
| Hypoglycemia | 104/832 (13 %) | 103/1184 (9) | 207/2016 (10 %) | 0.006 |
| Gastroenteritis | 56 (4 %) | 95 (6 %) | 151 (5 %) | 0.025 |
| Hyponatremia (<125Mmol/L) | 50/759 (7 %) | 31 (3 %) | 81 (5 %) | 0.003 |
| Meningitis | 69 5 %) | 58 (4 %) | 127 (5 %) | 0.052 |
| Neonatal sepsis | 72 (6 %) | 39 (3 %) | 111 (4 %) | <0.001 |
| Unknown encephalopathy | 73 (6) | 31 (2 %) | 104 (4 %) | <0.001 |
| Low hemoglobin (<5 g/L) | 35/1047 (3 %) | 34/1338 (3 %) | 69/2385 (3 %) | 0.246 |
| Urinary tract infection | 16 (1 %) | 25 (2) | 41 (1 %) | 0.370 |
| Hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (birth asphyxia) | 30 (2 %) | 9 (1 %) | 39 (1 %) | <0.001 |
| Trauma | 16 (1 %) | 18 (1 %) | 34 (1 %) | 0.896 |
| Skin disease | 11(1 %) | 19 (1 %) | 30 (1 %) | 0.305 |
| Septicemia | 12 (1 %) | 15 (1 %) | 27 (0 %) | 0.875 |
| Anemia | 13 (1 %) | 5 (<1 %) | 18 (1 %) | 0.025 |
| Sickle cell disease | 8 (1 %) | 7 (<1 %) | 15 (1 %) | 0.565 |
| Undetermined | 5 (<1 %) | 5 (<1 %) | 10 (<1 %) | 0.797 |
| Ear infection | 2 (<1 %) | 5 (<1 %) | 7 (<1 %) | 0.356 |
| Immunosuppression (HIV exposed) | 2 (<1 %) | 4 (<1 %) | 6 (<1 %) | 0.535 |
| Eye infections | 1 (<1 %) | 4 (<1 %) | 5 (<1 %) | 0.244 |
| Poisoning | 2 (<1 %) | 0 (0 %) | 2 (<1 %) | 0.125 |
| Prematurity | 2 (<1 %) | 0 (0 %) | 2 (<1 %) | 0.150 |
| Other causes | 12 (0.95 %) | 15 (1.01 %) | 27 (0.98 %) | 0.875 |
| Outcome: died | 104 (8 %) | 54 (4 %) | 158 (6 %) | <0.001 |
Fig. 2Incidence of admissions with acute seizures by year. Over the 5-year period, the incidence significantly increased for seizures-attributable to malaria (SAM), while non-SAM and neonatal seizures remained stable
Fig. 3Incidence of admissions with acute seizures by age group. Malarial seizures were uncommon before 6 months age. The incidence for all seizures appeared increased up to 36 months then declined