Characteristics of Children Admitted to the Emergency Department with Convulsive Epileptic Seizures: A Single-Center Study
Author(s) -
Emel Berksoy,
Ünsal Yılmaz,
Rana İşgüder,
Selçuk Yazıcı,
Tanju Çelik,
Aycan Ünalp
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
turkish journal of pediatric emergency and intensive care medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2148-7332
pISSN - 2146-2399
DOI - 10.4274/cayd.86548
Subject(s) - emergency department , epilepsy , medicine , febrile seizure , etiology , pediatrics , epileptic seizure , anesthesia , psychiatry
To evaluate the etiology and characteristics of children admitted to the emergency department with an acute convulsive epileptic seizure.\udMethods: Data of patients who were admitted to the emergency department with a convulsive epileptic seizure were reviewed. The patients were divided into febrile seizure, first idiopathic non-febrile seizure, idiopathic epilepsy, symptomatic epilepsy, and symptomatic seizure groups.\udResults: A total of 335 children were included in the study. Febrile seizures were the most common cause of convulsive seizure (38.5% of all visits), followed by idiopathic epilepsy-related seizures (35.8%), symptomatic epilepsy-related seizures (8.1%), first non-febrile seizures (17.6%), and symptomatic seizures (1.5%). The mean age of the patients was 4.73 years, and it was significantly lower in patients with febrile seizures when compared to the other groups (p<0.001).\udConclusion: Knowing the characteristics of children admitted to the emergency department with a convulsive epileptic seizure is important to guide appropriate management and individualized follow-up
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