| Literature DB >> 34727204 |
Lili C S Reinecke1, Jakob I Doerrfuss2, Alexander B Kowski1, Martin Holtkamp1,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: When treating patients with epileptic seizures in the emergency room (ER), it is of paramount importance to rapidly assess whether the seizure was acute symptomatic or unprovoked as the former points to a potentially life-threatening underlying condition. In this study, we seek to identify predictors and analyze characteristics of acute symptomatic seizures (ASS).Entities:
Keywords: Alcohol withdrawal; Antiseizure medication; Epilepsy; Stroke; Unprovoked seizure
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34727204 PMCID: PMC9021090 DOI: 10.1007/s00415-021-10871-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol ISSN: 0340-5354 Impact factor: 4.849
Fig. 1Patient selection. This figure shows the patient selection according to inclusion and exclusion criteria as well as allocation of patients with regards to acute symptomatic and unprovoked seizures
Predictors for acute symptomatic seizures
| All epileptic seizures ( | Acute symptomatic ( | Unprovoked ( | Binary logistic regression | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male sex, | 452 (65.0) | 140 (82.4) | 312 (59.4) | 3.173 (1.972–5.104) |
| Age, years, median [IQR] | 47.8 [32–62.9] | 48.2 [39.5–58.5] | 47.7 [29.5–64.9] | n.s |
| No prior diagnosis of epilepsy, | 287 (41.3) | 139 (81.8) | 148 (28.2) | 11.235 (7.198–17.537) |
| Seizure semiology | ||||
| Focal (aware/impaired awareness), | 71 (10.2) | 6 (3.5) | 65 (12.4) | 1.000 |
| Bilateral/generalized tonic–clonic, | 532 (76.6) | 138 (81.2) | 394 (75.0) | 2.982 (1.172–7.588) |
| Unclear, | 92 (13.2) | 26 (15.3) | 66 (12.6) | 2.535 (0.890–7.221) |
n number, IQR interquartile range, 95% CI 95% confidence interval, n.s. not significant
Scoring system estimating the probability of acute symptomatic seizure in the ER
| Total Score | Positive predictive value for acute symptomatic seizure (95% CI) |
|---|---|
| 0 | 0.0% (0–10.4) |
| 1 | 2.6% (0.1–6.3) |
| 2 | 13.3% (9.0–19.0) |
| 3 | 33.3% (15.5–56.9) |
| 4 | 47.3% (36.8–57.9) |
| 5 | 57.1% (48.9–64.9) |
Items to score: male sex: 1 point. Generalized/bilateral tonic–clonic seizure semiology: 1 point. No prior diagnosis of epilepsy: 3 points
CI confidence interval
Fig. 2Etiology of acute symptomatic seizures and allocation of unprovoked seizures. a Shows the etiologies of ASS. Metabolic–toxic disturbances are shown in blue colors, structural causes are in red tones. b Displays the allocation of unprovoked seizures. The bar graph illustrates the classification of established epilepsies. n number. #Other drugs include intoxication with gamma-hydroxybutric acid and withdrawal of benzodiazepines. *This includes 34 patients who presented with a first seizure and seven patients, where it remained unclear, whether the seizure was isolated or recurrent. PPV positive predictive value, NPV negative predictive value, CI confidence interval
Fig. 3Neuroimaging in patients with acute symptomatic and unprovoked seizures. a, b Show the proportion of patients that received neuroimaging (first row), the findings of the performed neuroimaging (second row) and the causal relationship of acute pathologies with respect to the seizure (third row). n number
Fig. 4ASM therapy in patients with and without seizure recurrence. The pie chart illustrates frequency of seizure recurrence. The left bar graph shows ASM therapy in patients without seizure recurrence, the right bar graph demonstrates ASM therapy in patients with seizure recurrence. n number