| Literature DB >> 27814760 |
Hyeon Jin Kim1, Kee Duk Park1, Kyoung-Gyu Choi1, Hyang Woon Lee2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The number of patients suffering post-stroke seizure after ischemic stroke (PSSi) is quite considerable, especially because ischemic stroke is more prevalent than hemorrhage in the general population. This study aimed to determine the predicting factors for seizure recurrence in ischemic stroke survivors and develop a clinical scoring system for the prediction of risks for seizure recurrence after the first PSSi.Entities:
Keywords: Epilepsy; Ischemic stroke; Post-ischemic stroke seizure; Seizure recurrence
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27814760 PMCID: PMC5097386 DOI: 10.1186/s12883-016-0729-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
Fig. 1Latency of post-ischemic stroke seizure occurrence since cerebral infarction. a Distribution of seizure onset latency, and b cumulative number of patients. In the early onset group (grey), the first seizure occurred concurrently with stroke (within 24 h) in 77.1 % (37/48) of patients. In the late onset group (black), the latency exhibited a wide variation with a mean of 22.4 months. The peak period was at 6 months to 1 year after stroke
Comparison of clinical characteristics related to early and late onset post-ischemic stroke seizures
| Clinical characteristics | Total | Early onset | Late onset |
| OR (95 % CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ( | ( | ( | ||||
| Age (years) | Median | 68.0 | 68.0 | 69.0 | 0.670 | |
| Interquartile range | 57.0–75.0 | 55.5–75.8 | 59.0–74.5 | |||
| Gender | Male | 69 | 29 (60.4 %) | 40 (52.6 %) | ||
| Female | 55 | 19 (39.6 %) | 36 (47.4 %) | 0.395 | 1.374 (0.660–2.859) | |
| Diabetes mellitus | 44 | 20 (41.7 %) | 24 (31.6 %) | 0.253 | 0.646 (0.305–1.369) | |
| Hypertension | 89 | 33 (68.8 %) | 56 (73.7 %) | 0.552 | 1.273 (0.574–2.820) | |
| Atrial fibrillation | 36 | 8 (16.7 %) | 28 (36.8 %) | 0.016* | 2.917 (1.197–7.108) | |
| TOAST classification | LAA | 69 | 26 (54.2 %) | 43 (56.6 %) | ||
| CE | 26 | 4 (10.4 %) | 22 (28.9 %) | |||
| SVO | 16 | 9 (18.8 %) | 7 (9.2 %) | |||
| Other determined | 2 | 1 (2.1 %) | 1 (1.3 %) | |||
| Undetermined | 10 | 7 (14.6 %) | 3 (3.9 %) | |||
| Lesion size | Small | 10 | 7 (14.6 %) | 3 (3.9 %) | ||
| Moderate | 31 | 17 (35.4 %) | 14 (18.4 %) | |||
| Large | 83 | 24 (50.0 %) | 59 (77.6 %) | 0.001** | ||
| Cortical involvement | 106 | 35 (72.9 %) | 71 (93.4 %) | 0.002** | 5.274 (1.742–15.972) | |
| Hemorrhagic transformation | 28 | 8 (16.7 %) | 20 (26.3 %) | 0.211 | 1.786 (0.715–4.458) | |
| Vascular territory | ACA | 9 | 3 (6.3 %) | 6 (7.9 %) | ||
| MCA | 76 | 23 (47.9 %) | 53 (69.7 %) | |||
| ICA | 13 | 6 (12.5 %) | 7 (9.2 %) | |||
| Lacune | 10 | 7 (14.6 %) | 3 (3.9 %) | |||
| Watershed | 6 | 4 (8.3 %) | 2 (2.6 %) | |||
| PCA | 7 | 3 (6.3 %) | 4 (5.3 %) | |||
| Venous | 2 | 1 (2.1 %) | 1 (1.3 %) | |||
| Brainstem | 1 | 1 (2.1 %) | 0 | |||
| Functional disability | Mild | 28 | 16 (33.3 %) | 12 (15.8 %) | ||
| Moderate | 35 | 6 (12.5 %) | 29 (38.2 %) | |||
| Severe | 61 | 26 (54.2 %) | 35 (46.1 %) | 0.527 | ||
| Status epilepticus | 33 | 13 (27.1 %) | 20 (26.3 %) | 0.925 | 0.962 (0.425–2.175) | |
| EEG findings | Normal | 20 | 9 (18.8 %) | 11 (14.5 %) | ||
| ( | Generalized slow | 17 | 9 (18.8 %) | 8 (10.5 %) | ||
| Regional slow | 59 | 19 (39.6 %) | 40 (52.6 %) | |||
| Epileptiform discharge | 20 | 8 (16.7 %) | 12 (15.8 %) | 0.136a | 1.825 (0.824–4.040) | |
| Clinical seizure type | Generalized | 68 | 23 (47.9 %) | 45 (59.2 %) | ||
| Partial | 56 | 25 (52.1 %) | 31 (40.8 %) | 0.218 | 0.634 (0.306–1.312) | |
| Seizure recurrence | 54 | 17 (35.4 %) | 37 (48.7 %) | 0.147 | 1.730 (0.823–3.637) | |
OR odds ratio, CI confidence interval, TOAST Trials of Org 10172 in Acute Stroke Treatment, LAA Large artery atherosclerosis, CE Cardioembolism, SVO Small vessel occlusion, ACA anterior cerebral artery, MCA middle cerebral artery, ICA internal cerebral artery, PCA posterior cerebral artery, EEG electroencephalography
Statistical significance with p < 0.05* and p < 0.01**
a Variables were substituted whether EEG findings were correlated with the relevant stroke lesion to evaluate the p-value
Antiepileptic drug regimen of post-ischemic stroke seizures patients
| Early onset PSSi ( | Late onset PSSi ( | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AED prescription | None | Discontinued | Continues | None | Discontinued | Continues |
| ( | ( | ( | ( | ( | ( | |
| Not recurred | 4 | 11 | 16 | 0 | 8 | 31 |
| Recurred | 3 | 3 | 11 | 7 | 14 | 16 |
AED antiepileptic drug, PSSi post-stroke seizure after ischemic stroke/post-ischemic stroke seizure
Clinical characteristics related to seizure recurrence after early onset post-ischemic stroke seizure
| Clinical characteristics | Not recurred | Recurred | Univariable analysis | Multivariable analysis | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ( | ( |
| OR (95 % CI) |
| OR (95 % CI) | |
| Age (years old) | 65.7 ± 14.9 | 66.1 ± 12.6 | 0.941 | 0.882a | 0.880 (0.161–4.799) | |
| Male gender | 17 (54.8 %) | 12 (70.6 %) | 0.286 | 1.976 (0.560–6.971) | 0.033* | 11.822 (1.222–114.347) |
| Diabetes mellitus | 16 (51.6 %) | 4 (23.5 %) | 0.059 | 0.288 (0.077–1.084) | 0.347 | 0.346 (0.038–3.167) |
| Hypertension | 23 (74.2 %) | 10 (58.8 %) | 0.272 | 0.497 (0.141–1.747) | 0.355 | 0.353 (0.039–3.206) |
| Atrial fibrillation | 3 (9.7 %) | 5 (29.4 %) | 0.112 | 3.889 (0.799–18.938) | 0.106 | 10.451 (0.609–179.306) |
| Lesion size | ||||||
| Small | 4 (12.9 %) | 3 (17.6 %) | 0.360 | |||
| Moderate | 13 (41.9 %) | 4 (23.5 %) | 0.576 | 2.779 (0.077–99.920) | ||
| Large | 14 (45.2 %) | 10 (58.8 %) | 0.468 | 0.440 | 0.412 (0.043–3.910) | |
| Cortical involvement | 21 (67.7 %) | 14 (82.4 %) | 0.330 | 2.222 (0.518–9.537) | 0.163 | 6.406 (0.471–87.078) |
| Hemorrhagic transformation | 6 (19.4 %) | 2 (11.8 %) | 0.694 | 0.556 (0.099–3.114) | 0.197 | 0.155 (0.009–2.632) |
| Functional disability | ||||||
| Mild | 12 (38.7 %) | 4 (23.5 %) | 0.402 | |||
| Moderate | 4 (12.9 %) | 2 (11.8 %) | 0.564 | 0.386 (0.015–9.788) | ||
| Severe | 15 (48.4 %) | 11 (64.7 %) | 0.532 | 0.293 | 3.517 (0.349–32.620) | |
| Status epilepticus | 8 (25.8 %) | 5 (29.4 %) | 1.000 | 1.198 (0.321–4.473) | 0.941 | 1.077 (0.151–7.673) |
| Relevant EEG findings ( | 17 (54.8 %) | 10 (58.8 %) | 0.900 | 0.924 (0.271–3.156) | 0.951 | 1.067 (0.134–8.512) |
| Partial seizure type | 14 (45.2 %) | 11 (64.7 %) | 0.195 | 2.226 (0.657–7.545) | 0.159 | 4.619 (0.546–38.873) |
OR odds ratio, CI confidence interval, EEG electroencephalography
Statistical significance with p < 0.05*
a Variables were substituted whether patients were younger than 65 years old
Clinical characteristics related to seizure recurrence after late onset of post-ischemic stroke seizure
| Clinical characteristics | Not recurred | Recurred | Univariable analysis | Multivariable analysis | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ( | ( |
| OR (95 % CI) |
| OR (95 % CI) | |
| Age (years old) | 70.7 ± 9.1 | 62.7 ± 11.9 | 0.001** | 0.050*a | 3.746 (1.000–14.040) | |
| Male gender | 14 (35.9 %) | 26 (70.3 %) | 0.003** | 4.221 (1.613–11.043) | 0.027* | 4.552 (1.183–17.511) |
| Diabetes mellitus | 14 (35.9 %) | 10 (27.0 %) | 0.406 | 0.661 (0.249–1.757) | 0.460 | 0.578 (0.135–2.476) |
| Hypertension | 31 (79.5 %) | 25 (67.6 %) | 0.238 | 0.538 (0.190–1.518) | 0.451 | 0.566 (0.129–2.488) |
| Atrial fibrillation | 16 (41.0 %) | 12 (32.4 %) | 0.438 | 0.690 (0.270–1.764) | 0.521 | 0.647 (0.171–2.443) |
| Lesion size | ||||||
| Small | 2 (5.1 %) | 1 (2.7 %) | 0.581 | |||
| Moderate | 8 (20.5 %) | 6 (16.2 %) | 0.999 | - | ||
| Large | 29 (74.4 %) | 30 (81.1 %) | 0.520 | 0.298 | 0.329 (0.041–2.667) | |
| Cortical involvement | 37 (94.9 %) | 34 (91.9 %) | 0.671 | 0.613 (0.096–3.891) | 0.999 | - |
| Hemorrhagic transformation | 7 (17.9 %) | 13 (35.1 %) | 0.089 | 2.476 (0.858–7.150) | 0.688 | 1.370 (0.296–6.347) |
| Functional disability | ||||||
| Mild | 5 (12.8 %) | 7 (18.9 %) | 0.802 | |||
| Moderate | 15 (38.5 %) | 14 (37.8 %) | 0.854 | 1.216 (0.151–9.796) | ||
| Severe | 19 (48.7 %) | 16 (43.2 %) | 0.490 | 0.558 | 1.833 (0.205–16.406) | |
| Status epilepticus | 14 (35.9 %) | 6 (16.2 %) | 0.051* | 0.346 (0.116–1.030) | 0.057 | 0.208 (0.041–1.048) |
| Relevant EEG findings ( | 30 (76.9 %) | 22 (59.5 %) | 0.051* | 0.338 (0.111–1.030) | 0.118 | 0.294 (0.063–1.367) |
| Partial seizure type | 14 (35.9 %) | 17 (45.9 %) | 0.373 | 1.518 (0.605–3.808) | 0.237 | 2.227 (0.590–8.404) |
OR odd ratio, CI confidence interval, EEG electroencephalography
Statistical significance with p < 0.05* and p < 0.01**
a Variables were substituted whether patients were younger than 65 years
Validity tests for post-ischemic stroke seizure recurrence risk score models
| Version | Itemsa | AUC | 95 % CI | Criteria | Sensitivity | Specificity | + LR | - LR | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Early | Score 1-1 | Y, M, A, B, C, H, D, E, F, P | 0.653 | 0.502–0.784 | 6 | 58.8 % | 67.7 % | 1.82 | 0.61 |
| PSSi | Score 1-2 | Y, M, A, B, C, H, mRS, E, F, P | 0.650 | 0499–0.782 | 9 | 52.9 % | 80.7 % | 2.74 | 0.58 |
| Score 2-1 | B, C, H, D, E, F, P | 0.621 | 0.470–0.757 | 5 | 64.7 % | 71.0 % | 2.23 | 0.50 | |
| Score 2-2 | B, C, H, mRS, E, F, P | 0.622 | 0.471–0.758 | 8 | 52.9 % | 80.7 % | 2.74 | 0.58 | |
| Score 3-1 | M, A, C, D, P | 0.735 | 0.588–0.852 | 3 | 70.6 % | 71.0 % | 2.43 | 0.41 | |
| Score 3-2 | M, A, C, mRS, P | 0.676 | 0.525–0.803 | 6 | 47.1 % | 80.7 % | 2.43 | 0.66 | |
| MESS | mRS ≥ 1, abnormal EEG | 0.509 | 0.361–0.657 | 1 | 70.6 % | 35.5 % | 1.09 | 0.83 | |
| PoSERS | Supratentorial (X 2), C, H, mRS ≥ 3 | 0.576 | 0.425–0.717 | 3 | 58.8 % | 58.1 % | 1.40 | 0.71 | |
| Late | Score 1-1 | Y, M, A, B, C, H, D, E, F, P | 0.566 | 0.447–0.679 | 7 | 46.0 % | 61.5 % | 1.19 | 0.88 |
| PSSi | Score 1-2 | Y, M, A, B, C, H, mRS, E, F, P | 0.558 | 0.439–0.671 | 9 | 40.5 % | 69.2 % | 1.32 | 0.86 |
| Score 2-1 | B, C, H, D, E, F, P | 0.534 | 0.416–0.649 | 5 | 43.2 % | 59.0 % | 1.05 | 0.96 | |
| Score 2-2 | B, C, H, mRS, E, F, P | 0.526 | 0.408–0.642 | 7 | 54.1 % | 59.0 % | 1.32 | 0.78 | |
| Score 4 | Y, M, B, P | 0.734 | 0.620–0.829 | 3 | 62.2 % | 81.1 % | 3.46 | 0.46 | |
| MESS | mRS ≥ 1, abnormal EEG | 0.594 | 0.475–0.705 | 1 | 32.4 % | 87.2 % | 2.53 | 0.78 | |
| PoSERS | Supratentorial (X 2), C, H, mRS ≥ 3 | 0.532 | 0.414–0.647 | 4 | 21.6 % | 89.7 % | 2.11 | 0.87 |
AUC area under the curve, CI confidence interval, +LR positive likely-hood ratio, -LR negative likely-hood ratio, mRS modified Rankin Score, MESS MRC Multicenter trial for Early Epilepsy and Single Seizure, PoSERS Post-Stroke Epilepsy Risk Scale, EEG electroencephalography
a Y, younger age - below 65 years old (1); M, male (1); A, atrial fibrillation (1); B, bigger lesion size - small (0), moderate (1), large (2); C, cortical involvement (1); H, hemorrhagic transformation (1); D, functional disability - mild (0), moderate (1), severe (2); E, status epilepticus (1); F, relevant focal EEG finding (1); P, partial seizure (1)
Fig. 2Receiver operating characteristic curves for the seizure recurrence risk score models. a Validation in the early onset post-ischemic stroke seizure (PSSi) group, and b validation in the late onset PSSi group. Score 1-1 included all 10 items, whereas score 2-1 excluded age, sex, and atrial fibrillation factors. Score 3-1 (male sex, atrial fibrillation, cortical involvement, functional disability, and partial seizure) in early onset and score 4 (younger age at seizure onset, male sex, large stroke lesion, and partial seizure) in late onset patients (solid line) were composed of more prevalent items (p < 0.3) in each recurrent group that showed the largest area under the curve (AUC) among each group’s suggested scores. Predictive scores from MRC Multicenter trial for Early Epilepsy and Single Seizures (MESS) and Post-Stroke Epilepsy Risk Scale (PoSERS) study were applied to compare our patients. However, they demonstrated little efficacy for detecting or discriminating seizure recurrence in patients with early and late onset PSSi