Epilepsy in children: an epidemiological study at Kathmandu Medical College Teaching Hospital Kathmandu.
Article
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| IMSEAR
| ID: sea-46289
OBJECTIVES: To analyze the relative frequencies of various epileptic seizures and to study the age at onset of different seizure types in Nepalese children. DESIGN: Prospective study. SETTING: Hospital outpatient based in Kathmandu, Nepal, between November 2001 to October 2002. PARTICIPANTS: 50 children diagnosed as epilepsy excluding neonatal and febrile seizures. Main outcome measure: Diagnosis and classification of cases according to the International Classification of Epilepsy of the International League Against Epilepsy [ILAE] and number of patients in each category with various ages at first seizure. RESULT: Generalized seizures (78%) were 3.54 times commoner than partial seizures (22%). Most frequent seizure types were generalized tonic clonic (36%), tonic (16%), complex partial (14%), atonic (12%) and absence (10%). Generalized clonic, simple partial and partial with secondary generalization, each had less than 5% frequencies. In 40% cases the first seizure occurred when aged between 2-5 years. In partial seizures the peak age at onset was observed below 6 years while primary generalized seizure was more frequently seen in age group 2-10 years. CONCLUSION: More paediatric patients with primary generalized seizures (78%) were observed than with partial seizures (22%). In this age group, the most frequent seizure type was generalized tonic clonic (36%) with the peak frequency of age at onset of seizures in 2-5 years.
Texte intégral:
1
Indice:
IMSEAR
Sujet Principal:
Femelle
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Humains
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Mâle
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Enfant
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Enfant d'âge préscolaire
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Études prospectives
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Adolescent
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Épilepsies partielles
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Épilepsie généralisée
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Âge de début
Type d'étude:
Observational_studies
Pays comme sujet:
Asia
langue:
En
Année:
2003
Type:
Article