| Literature DB >> 29492970 |
Owen Middleton1, Daniel Atherton2, Elizabeth Bundock3, Elizabeth Donner4, Daniel Friedman5, Dale Hesdorffer6, Heather Jarrell7, Aileen McCrillis8, Othon J Mena9, Mitchel Morey1, David Thurman10, Niu Tian11, Torbjörn Tomson12,13, Zian Tseng14, Steven White15, Cyndi Wright16, Orrin Devinsky5.
Abstract
Sudden unexpected death of an individual with epilepsy can pose a challenge to death investigators, as most deaths are unwitnessed, and the individual is commonly found dead in bed. Anatomic findings (eg, tongue/lip bite) are commonly absent and of varying specificity, thereby limiting the evidence to implicate epilepsy as a cause of or contributor to death. Thus it is likely that death certificates significantly underrepresent the true number of deaths in which epilepsy was a factor. To address this, members of the National Association of Medical Examiners, North American SUDEP Registry, Epilepsy Foundation SUDEP Institute, American Epilepsy Society, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention constituted an expert panel to generate evidence-based recommendations for the practice of death investigation and autopsy, toxicological analysis, interpretation of autopsy and toxicology findings, and death certification to improve the precision of death certificate data available for public health surveillance of epilepsy-related deaths. The recommendations provided in this paper are intended to assist medical examiners, coroners, and death investigators when a sudden unexpected death in a person with epilepsy is encountered.Entities:
Keywords: autopsy; death investigation; epilepsy; mortality; sudden unexpected death in epilepsy
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29492970 PMCID: PMC6084455 DOI: 10.1111/epi.14030
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epilepsia ISSN: 0013-9580 Impact factor: 5.864