1. Improvement of modern treatment and outcome in childhood epilepsy in Asia.
- Author
-
Chi CS
- Subjects
- Adrenocorticotropic Hormone adverse effects, Asia, Child, Epilepsy classification, Humans, Prognosis, Epilepsy therapy
- Abstract
Epilepsy and epileptic syndromes are one of the major pediatric neurological diseases in Taiwan, R.O.C. In 1984 we investigated 38 elementary schools in Taichung city, in the middle-west part of Taiwan. Among 57,944 school-aged children, 388 had suffered from at least two episodes of afebrile seizures occurring separately over a two-week period. The period prevalence rate was 0.67%. In our clinic, once seizures are diagnosed, the seizure types are then classified as well as possible, in order to develop a rational approach to treatment. We commonly use carbamazepine for partial seizures and some generalized seizures, low dose ACTH (10 I.U.) for infantile spasms, valproic acid for absence seizures and myoclonic seizures, clonazepam for atonic-akinetic and myoclonic seizures, and phenobarbital for young children with generalized seizures. In the last three years, we have used a ketogenic diet for akinetic-atonic seizures and Lennox-Gastaut syndrome; we have also used temporal lobectomy for complex partial seizures since 1981. Owing to the marked increase in the medical understanding of epileptic seizures and syndromes, and models of treatment, there is no question that children with seizure disorders are better off today than they were ten years ago.
- Published
- 1989
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