Increased seizure duration (OR 1.131/hour, p=0.0057) and delay to diagnosis (OR 1.039/hour, p=0.0351) were significantly associated with increased mortality in ICU patients with nonconvulsive seizures.
Observational (n=49)
49 intensive care unit patients with nonconvulsive seizures monitored with continuous EEG.
Seizure duration and delay to diagnosis
Mortality — OR 1.131, p=0.0057
Odds Ratio: 1.131
p-value: p=0.0057
Of 49 patients with nonconvulsive seizures studied with continuous EEG monitoring, the overall mortality was 33% (16/49). Of the 23 patients with nonconvulsive status epilepticus (NCSE), 13 died (mortality 57%). Individual variables significantly associated with mortality were age, presence of NCSE, seizure duration, hospital and NICU length of stay, and delay to diagnosis and etiology (acute illness versus remote symptomatic). With multivariate logistic regression, only seizure duration (p = 0.0057, OR = 1.131/hour) and delay to diagnosis (p = 0.0351, OR = 1.039/hour) were associated with increased mortality. Acute symptomatic cases could not be adequately classified as either absence, simple, or complex partial status epilepticus when the impairment of consciousness arose form the initial illness. Current classifications of status epilepticus are inadequate for such cases.
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G. Bryan Young
Western University
Kenneth G. Jordan
Temple University
Gordon S. Doig
The University of Sydney
Neurology
Victoria Hospital
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Young et al. (Mon,) conducted a observational in Nonconvulsive seizures (n=49). Seizure duration and delay to diagnosis was evaluated on Mortality (OR 1.131, p=0.0057). Increased seizure duration (OR 1.131/hour, p=0.0057) and delay to diagnosis (OR 1.039/hour, p=0.0351) were significantly associated with increased mortality in ICU patients with nonconvulsive seizures.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a1ea73794615786b59a67f6 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1212/wnl.47.1.83
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