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Postencephalitic Epilepsy and Acute Symptomatic Seizures, in Infectious, Undetermined Etiology and Autoimmune Encephalitis (P4.5-028)

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dc.contributor.author Marone, Abril
dc.contributor.author Alessandro, Lucas
dc.contributor.author Ugarnes, Gabriela
dc.contributor.author Farez, Mauricio Franco
dc.date.accessioned 2020-12-21T13:13:33Z
dc.date.available 2020-12-21T13:13:33Z
dc.date.issued 2019-05-08
dc.identifier.citation Marone, A., Alessandro, L., Ugarnes, G., Farez, M. Postencephalitic Epilepsy and Acute Symptomatic Seizures, in Infectious, Undetermined Etiology and Autoimmune Encephalitis (P4.5-028). Neurology. 2019;92(15 Supplement). P4.5-028 en_US
dc.identifier.uri https://n.neurology.org/content/92/15_Supplement/P4.5-028
dc.identifier.uri https://repositorio.fleni.org.ar/handle/123456789/275
dc.description.abstract Objective: To describe the encephalitis that have more frequently acute symptomatic seizures (ASS), type of seizures and development of postencephalitic epilepsy (PE). Background: Encephalitis is a frequent cause of symptomatic epilepsy. Patients who have acute symptomatic seizures (ASS) have a 10 and 22% risk of developing epilepsy in 5 and 20 years respectively. Patients with postencephalitic epilepsy (PE) have a worse prognosis. Design/Methods: Retrospective review of medical records of patients diagnosed with encephalitis between January-2006 and June-2018. Patients with previous epilepsy were excluded. The incidence of ASS, PE, clinical characteristics, complementary studies, treatment, and evolution was analyzed. For the comparison between groups, Chi square and Fisher tests were used for the categorical variables, and parametric and non-parametric methods for the continuous variables. Results: We included 130 patients with encephalitis, 46 infectious, 50 undetermined etiology and 34 autoimmune. 71% of the autoimmune patients presented ASS, being more frequent than the other etiologies (43% infectious and 58% undetermined etiology, p = 0.05). The autoimmune encephalitis presented a greater frequency of focal onset seizures to bilateral tonic-clonic, respect to the others (33% vs 7% undetermined etiology vs 10% infectious, p = 0.008). Patients with autoimmune encephalitis developed more PE than the others (24% vs 9% undetermined etiology and 6% infectious, p = 0.2). The most frequent seizures during the evolution of PE in autoimmune encephalitis were focal onset seizures with impaired awareness. Conclusions: In autoimmune encephalitis, a greater frequency of ASS was observed, manifested predominantly with focal onset seizures and evolved in a greater percentage of PE, compared with infectious and undetermined etiology encephalitis. From the findings observed, it would be important to determine and establish if the precociousness of the specific treatment of autoimmune encephalitis, could modify the evolution to PE. en_US
dc.language.iso eng en_US
dc.publisher AAN en_US
dc.rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
dc.rights.uri https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar/
dc.subject Epilepsy en_US
dc.subject Epilepsia en_US
dc.subject Seizures en_US
dc.subject Convulsiones en_US
dc.subject Encephalitis en_US
dc.subject Encefalitis en_US
dc.title Postencephalitic Epilepsy and Acute Symptomatic Seizures, in Infectious, Undetermined Etiology and Autoimmune Encephalitis (P4.5-028) en_US
dc.type info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
dc.type info:eu-repo/semantics/other en_US
dc.description.fil Fil: Marone, Abril. Fleni. Centro Integral de Epilepsia y Unidad de Monitoreo de Videoelectroencefalografía; Argentina.
dc.description.fil Fil: Alessandro, Lucas. Fleni. Departamento de Neurología; Argentina. Fleni. Clínica de Esclerosis Lateral Amiotrófica; Argentina.
dc.description.fil Fil: Ugarnes, Gabriela. Fleni. Centro Integral de Epilepsia y Unidad de Monitoreo de Videoelectroencefalografía; Argentina.
dc.description.fil Fil: Farez, Mauricio Franco. Fleni. Centro para la Investigación de Enfermedades Neuroinmunológicas; Argentina.
dc.relation.ispartofVOLUME 92
dc.relation.ispartofNUMBER 15
dc.relation.ispartofCOUNTRY Estados Unidos
dc.relation.ispartofCITY Hagerstown
dc.relation.ispartofTITLE Neurology
dc.relation.ispartofISSN 1526-632X
dc.type.snrd info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo es_ES


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