1. Status epilepticus and alcohol abuse: An analysis of 82 status epilepticus admissions
- Author
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Antero Pilke, J. Kovanen, and Markku Partinen
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Alcohol abuse ,Status epilepticus ,03 medical and health sciences ,Epilepsy ,Status Epilepticus ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pharmacotherapy ,Alcohol Withdrawal Seizures ,Humans ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Aged ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,3. Good health ,Alcoholism ,Neurology ,Anesthesia ,Concomitant ,Grand Mal Status Epilepticus ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Brain metastasis - Abstract
– In 1979–80, 82 cases of grand mal status epilepticus (71 patients, 39 male and 32 female) were admitted to the Casualty Department of Meilahti University Hospital in Helsinki, Finland. The cause of the underlying epilepsy was symptomatic in 43 cases (52.4%) and idiopathic in 19 cases (23.2%). In 6 cases (7.3%), there was a history of alcohol withdrawal seizures, and in 14 cases (17.1%) there was no earlier history of convulsions. Status epilepticus was associated with an acute or progressive cerebral disorder in 14 episodes. These comprised 6 bouts of status with brain tumour, 4 with acute stroke and 4 with brain injury. Alcohol abuse preceded the status in 29 episodes (35.4%), 23 of which occurred in men (53.5% of the male cases). Excessive use of alcohol was the only obvious precipitating factor for status in 16 cases, and in 6 cases the status presented as a prolonged alcohol withdrawal seizure. A change or irregularity of anticonvulsive drug therapy could be documented in 14 cases and an acute infection outside the central nervous system in 7 cases. Intravenous diazepam, used as the only therapy for status epilepticus, was effective in 58 of 78 episodes. In 7 cases of prolonged status, a thiopental sodium anaesthesia proved effective. The total mortality was 4.2%, including 2 deaths from concomitant extracerebral disorders and one late death from brain metastasis.
- Published
- 2009
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