1. Prevalence of epileptic and nonepileptic events after pediatric traumatic brain injury.
- Author
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Matsumoto JH, Caplan R, McArthur DL, Forgey MJ, Yudovin S, and Giza CC
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Age Factors, Chi-Square Distribution, Child, Child, Preschool, Cohort Studies, Databases, Factual statistics & numerical data, Electroencephalography, Epilepsy, Post-Traumatic diagnosis, Humans, Prevalence, Retrospective Studies, Seizures diagnosis, Brain Injuries complications, Epilepsy, Post-Traumatic epidemiology, Pediatrics, Seizures epidemiology, Seizures etiology
- Abstract
Though posttraumatic epilepsy (PTE) is a prominent sequela of traumatic brain injury (TBI), other nonepileptic phenomena also warrant consideration. Within two UCLA pediatric TBI cohorts, we categorized five spell types: 1) PTE; 2) Epilepsy with other potential etiologies (cortical dysplasia, primary generalized); 3) Psychopathology; 4) Behavior misinterpreted as seizures; and 5) Other neurologic events. The two cohort subsets differed slightly in injury severity, but they were otherwise similar. Overall, PTE occurred in 40%, other epilepsy etiologies in 14%, and nonepileptic spells collectively in 46%. Among children with spells, PTE was associated with severe TBI (p=0.001), whereas psychopathology (p=0.014) and epilepsy with other etiologies (p=0.006) were associated with milder TBI severity. Posttraumatic epilepsy (p=0.002) and misinterpreted behavior (p=0.049) occurred with younger injury age. Psychopathology (p=0.020) and other neurologic events (p=0.002) occurred with older injury age. In evaluating possible PTE, clinicians should maintain a broad differential diagnosis to prevent misdiagnosis and inappropriate treatment., (Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
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