| Literature DB >> 35617146 |
Sanjeeb Sapkota, Elise Caruso, Rosemarie Kobau, Lakshmi Radhakrishnan, Barbara Jobst, Jourdan DeVies, Niu Tian, R Edward Hogan, Matthew M Zack, Daniel M Pastula.
Abstract
Seizures, transient signs or symptoms caused by abnormal surges of electrical activity in the brain, can result from epilepsy, a neurologic disorder characterized by abnormal electrical brain activity causing recurrent, unprovoked seizures, or from other inciting causes, such as high fever or substance abuse (1). Seizures generally account for approximately 1% of all emergency department (ED) visits (2,3). Persons of any age can experience seizures, and outcomes might range from no complications for those with a single seizure to increased risk for injury, comorbidity, impaired quality of life, and early mortality for those with epilepsy (4). To examine trends in weekly seizure- or epilepsy-related (seizure-related) ED visits† in the United States before and during the COVID-19 pandemic, CDC analyzed data from the National Syndromic Surveillance Program (NSSP).§ Seizure-related ED visits decreased abruptly during the early pandemic period. By the end of 2020, seizure-related ED visits returned almost to prepandemic levels for persons of all ages, except children aged 0-9 years. By mid-2021, however, this age group gradually returned to baseline as well. Reasons for the decrease in seizure-related ED visits in 2020 among all age groups and the slow return to baseline among children aged 0-9 years compared with other age groups are unclear. The decrease might have been associated with fear of exposure to COVID-19 infection in EDs deterring parents or guardians of children from seeking care, adherence to mitigation measures including avoiding public settings such as EDs, or increased access to telehealth services decreasing the need for ED visits (5). These findings reinforce the importance of understanding factors associated with ED avoidance among persons with epilepsy or seizure, the importance that all eligible persons be up to date¶ with COVID-19 vaccination, and the need to encourage persons to seek appropriate care for seizure-related emergencies** to prevent adverse outcomes.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35617146 PMCID: PMC9153465 DOI: 10.15585/mmwr.mm7121a2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep ISSN: 0149-2195 Impact factor: 35.301
Mean weekly seizure- or epilepsy-related emergency department visits and overall emergency department visits, by age and sex, and percentage change* — National Syndromic Surveillance Program, United States, April 1–December 29, 2019–2021
| Characteristic | Mean weekly visits, no. (95% CI)§ | % Change | |||
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| 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2019–2020 | 2020–2021 | |
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| 0–9 | 2,759 (2,660–2,864) | 1,553 (1,504–1,593) | 2,528 (2,462–2,593) | −44 | 63 |
| 10–19 | 1,893 (1,846–1,940) | 1,413 (1,356–1,469) | 1,749 (1,710–1,786) | −25 | 24 |
| 20–39 | 7,102 (7,037–7,165) | 6,143 (5,957–6,316) | 6,579 (6,478–6,680) | −13 | 7 |
| 40–59 | 6,476 (6,412–6,539) | 5,701 (5,548–5,838) | 5,769 (5,678–5,860) | −12 | 1 |
| 60–69 | 2,588 (2,561–2,617) | 2,423 (2,373–2,467) | 2,495 (2,468–2,524) | −6 | 3 |
| ≥70 | 2,641 (2,604–2,679) | 2,504(2,441–2,561) | 2,583 (2,557–2,613) | −5 | 3 |
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| Female | 11,422 (11,344–11,501) | 9,327 (9,044–9,579) | 10,373 (10,280–10,470) | −18 | 11 |
| Male | 12,128 (12,039–12,236) | 10,462 (10,214–10,694) | 11,387 (11,296–11,470) | −14 | 9 |
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| 0–9 | 162,711 (154,767–171,195) | 71,131 (67,015–74,824) | 142,868 (137,805–147,822) | −56 | 101 |
| 10–19 | 127,264 (123,781–130,677) | 79,594 (74,870–84,171) | 114,353 (111,036–117,884) | −37 | 44 |
| 20–39 | 416,652 (413,210–420,159) | 336,598 (322,674–348,693) | 401,671 (394,081–409,796) | −19 | 19 |
| 40–59 | 347,606 (344,299–350,816) | 288,453 (278,532–297,426) | 337,317 (331,750–342,781) | −17 | 17 |
| 60–69 | 157,694 (156,596–158,946) | 135,574 (130,804–139,547) | 161,899 (160,116–163,865) | −14 | 19 |
| ≥70 | 231,619 (230,000–233,699) | 193,202 (185,523–199,808) | 231,799 (229,713–233,852) | −17 | 20 |
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| Female | 797,473 (791,101–804,433) | 593,418 (568,244–615,384) | 755,769 (745,392–766,769) | −26 | 27 |
| Male | 651,555 (646,948–656,594) | 513,365 (494,989–530,303) | 636,576 (627,504–646,651) | −21 | 24 |
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Abbreviation: ED = emergency department.
* The percentage change in visits between the surveillance and reference periods (2019 [reference] versus 2020 [surveillance] and 2020 [reference] versus 2021 [surveillance]) was calculated as (ED visits during surveillance period – ED visits during reference period)/ED visits during reference period x 100%.
† The National Syndromic Surveillance Program receives anonymized medical record information from approximately 71% of nonfederal EDs nationwide. To reduce artifactual impact from changes in reporting patterns, analyses were restricted to facilities with more consistent reporting of more complete data (coefficient of variation ≤40 and average weekly informative discharge diagnosis ≥75% complete during 2019–2021).
§ CIs were constructed using the percentile bootstrap method using 1,000 replicate samples of the weekly counts. CIs were formed using the 2.5th and 97.5th percentiles of the bootstrap distributions.
FIGURE 1Weekly seizure- or epilepsy-related emergency department visits among persons aged <40 years, by age group* — National Syndromic Surveillance Program, United States, 2019–2021
Abbreviation: ED = emergency department.
* The y-axis range differs for different age groups to account for different numbers of ED visits by these groups and to facilitate visualization of changes over time.
† The National Syndromic Surveillance Program receives deidentified medical record information from approximately 71% of nonfederal EDs nationwide. To reduce artifactual impact from changes in reporting patterns, analyses were restricted to facilities with more consistent reporting of more complete data (coefficient of variation ≤40 and average weekly informative discharge diagnosis ≥75% complete during 2019–2021).
FIGURE 2Weekly seizure- or epilepsy-related emergency department visits among persons aged ≥40 years, by age group* — National Syndromic Surveillance Program, United States, 2019–2021
Abbreviation: ED = emergency department.
* The y-axis range differs for different age groups to account for different numbers of ED visits by these groups and to facilitate visualization of changes over time.
† The National Syndromic Surveillance Program receives deidentified medical record information from approximately 71% of nonfederal EDs nationwide. To reduce artifactual impact from changes in reporting patterns, analyses were restricted to facilities with more consistent reporting of more complete data (coefficient of variation ≤40 and average weekly informative discharge diagnosis ≥75% complete during 2019–2021).