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A 10‐Year Follow‐up Study of 97 Epileptics
Author(s) -
Yamada Hiroaki,
Yoshida Hozuka,
Ninomiya Hideaki,
Kato Yuji
Publication year - 1979
Publication title -
psychiatry and clinical neurosciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.609
H-Index - 74
eISSN - 1440-1819
pISSN - 1323-1316
DOI - 10.1111/j.1440-1819.1979.tb00189.x
Subject(s) - epilepsy , psychology , medicine , psychiatry
Summary 1) Of 267 patients with epilepsy who were examined in our clinic during the period between 1964 and 1966, 97 were investigated in a 10‐year follow‐up study. The patients were selected according to the following criteria: the age of onset of seizures was 10 years or older and the follow‐up period was 10 years after the onset of seizures. Of the 97 patients, 36 were followed up by mail. 2) In the adult 10‐year follow‐up study, seizures disappeared in 43.3%, decreased in 34.0%, remained unchanged in 16.5%, and were aggravated in 6.2% of the 97 patients. Comparing the five‐year follow‐up study with the present study, the rate of cases which were free of seizures for three years was 22.7% in the five‐year study and 43.3% in this study. The seizures were controlled for at least three years in 22.9% of the cases with partial seizure and in 63.3% of the cases with generalized seizure. The worst prognoses were found in cases with versive seizure in which the seizure was unchanged and/or aggravated in 4 (44.4%) of 9 cases. Of 16 cases with psychomotor seizure, 25% were unchanged or aggravated. 3) Comparing the impaired consciousness seizure with the psychomotor seizure, there was a tendency for the psychomotor seizures to remain as a single type of partial seizure, while the impaired consciousness seizure tended to develop easily into a secondarily generalized seizure. 4) Of the 97 patients, there were personality disorders in 19 cases (19.6%), episodic psychotic state in 2 cases (2.1%, and mental retardation in 6 cases (6.2%). Disorders of mood, irritability and explosiveness associated with personality disorders were improved in three of six cases whose seizures disappeared. Personality disorders were found in half of those cases with partial complex seizures. No correlation was found between mental symptoms and the prognosis of seizures. 5) The EEG was improved in 15 (27.8%) of a total of 54 cases, unchanged in 35 (64.8%) and aggravated in 4 (7.4%). In comparing the prognosis of clinical seizure with changes in the EEG, the seizures improved in 40 (74.1%) of the cases, whereas the EEG improved in only 15 (27.8%) of 54 cases. Most of the clinical seizures were controlled or decreased, whether the EEG improved or not.

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