Literature DB >> 9041870

Long-term psychosocial outcome in typical absence epilepsy. Sometimes a wolf in sheeps' clothing.

E C Wirrell1, C S Camfield, P R Camfield, J M Dooley, K E Gordon, B Smith.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To determine whether young adults in whom typical absence epilepsy has been diagnosed in childhood have greater psychosocial difficulties than those with a non-neurologic chronic disease and to decide which seizure-related factors predict poor psychosocial outcome.
DESIGN: Population-based, inception cohort study.
SETTING: The only tertiary care pediatric hospital in the province of Nova Scotia. PATIENTS: All children in whom typical absence epilepsy or juvenile rheumatoid arthritis (JRA) was diagnosed between January 1, 1997, and December 31, 1985, who were aged 18 years or older at follow-up in March 1994 to April 1995. Patients with typical absence epilepsy were identified from centralized electroencephalographic records for Nova Scotia, and those with JRA were identified from discharge diagnoses from the only children's hospital in Nova Scotia. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Patients participated in a structured interview that assessed psychosocial function.
RESULTS: Fifty-six (86%) of the 65 patients with absence epilepsy and 61 (80%) of the 76 patients with JRA participated in the interview. The mean age of the patients at the interview was 23 years. Terminal remission occurred in 32 (57%) of the patients with typical absence epilepsy but in only 17 (28%) of the patients with JRA. Factor analysis identified 5 categories of outcome: academic-personal, behavioral, employment-financial, family relations, and social-personal relations. Patients with typical absence epilepsy had greater difficulties in the academic-personal and in the behavioral categories (P < .001) than those with JRA. Those with ongoing seizures had the least favorable outcome. Most seizure-related factors showed minimal correlation with psychosocial functioning.
CONCLUSION: Young adults with a history of typical absence epilepsy, particularly those without remission of their seizures, often have poor psychosocial outcomes, considerably worse than those with JRA.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1997        PMID: 9041870     DOI: 10.1001/archpedi.1997.02170390042008

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med        ISSN: 1072-4710


  53 in total

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2.  Impaired attention and network connectivity in childhood absence epilepsy.

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Review 3.  Neuropsychological deficits in childhood epilepsy syndromes.

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4.  Is behavior in temporal lobe epilepsy different than in other epilepsies? The jury is out.

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5.  Stress and seizure control in children: where to now?

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6.  Psychosocial and functional outcomes in young adults with childhood-onset epilepsy: a 10-year follow-up.

Authors:  Rachel Friefeld Kesselmayer; Taylor McMillan; Beatrice Lee; Dace Almane; Bruce P Hermann; Jana E Jones
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7.  Growing up with epilepsy: a two-year investigation of cognitive development in children with new onset epilepsy.

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8.  Youth With Epilepsy: Development of a Model of Children's Attitudes Toward Their Condition.

Authors:  Joan K Austin; David W Dunn; Susan M Perkins; Jianzhao Shen
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9.  What is new in paediatric epilepsy?

Authors:  Peter Camfield; Carol Camfield
Journal:  Paediatr Child Health       Date:  2003-11       Impact factor: 2.253

10.  Pretreatment EEG in childhood absence epilepsy: associations with attention and treatment outcome.

Authors:  Dennis Dlugos; Shlomo Shinnar; Avital Cnaan; Fengming Hu; Solomon Moshé; Eli Mizrahi; David Masur; Yoshi Sogawa; J B Le Pichon; Calley Levine; Deborah Hirtz; Peggy Clark; Peter C Adamson; Tracy Glauser
Journal:  Neurology       Date:  2013-05-29       Impact factor: 9.910

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