1. Overuse of EEG and ECG in children with breath‐holding spells and its implication for the management of the spells.
- Author
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Hellström Schmidt, Sanna, Smedenmark, Julia, Jeremiasen, Ida, Sigurdsson, Björn, Eklund, Erik A., and Pronk, Cornelis Jan
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EPILEPSY , *LONG QT syndrome , *MYOCLONUS , *ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY , *ELECTROCARDIOGRAPHY , *IRON deficiency anemia - Abstract
Aim: Breath‐holding spells (BHS) are common in children, but evidence‐based clinical guidelines are lacking. We investigated a large population‐based cohort of BHS patients, to propose a refined description of typical BHS and guidelines for its management. Methods: In a cross‐sectional retrospective study, patients diagnosed with BHS in Southern Sweden 2004–2018 were recruited. Disease characteristics and diagnostic data were collected from patient medical records. Results: In total, 519 patients, mean age at diagnosis 19.8 ± 13.8 months with equal gender distribution, were included. In 48.3%, BHS had already been diagnosed after one spell. During spells, 78.0% of patients were unresponsive. For 71.5%, atonic, tonic, tonic–clonic or myoclonic seizures were reported, and 78.0% of patients had a spell lasting less than 1 min. Electroencephalography was conducted in 30.4% and Electrocardiography in 45.1%. Six children (3.8%) had a pathological electroencephalogram, four of which had concomitant epilepsy and only 0.9% of children had electrocardiogram findings suggesting pathology, none showing long QT syndrome. Conclusion: Children with BHS were frequently subjected to unnecessary diagnostic interventions. We characterise a typical presentation of BHS and propose a management‐algorithm, which is expected to reduce unnecessary usage of electroencephalography and electrocardiography. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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