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Convulsive status epilepticus in children.

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TLDR
The first unprovoked seizure of status epilepticus (SE) occurs most commonly in infancy and childhood as discussed by the authors, and most cases are convulsive and the majority are generalized.
Abstract
Status epilepticus (SE) occurs most commonly in infancy and childhood. Children with prior neurological abnormalities are most susceptible. More than 90% of cases are convulsive and the majority are generalized. SE may occur in the setting of an acute illness, in patients with established epilepsy or as a first unprovoked seizure. The etiology can be classified as idiopathic, remote symptomatic, febrile, acute symptomatic, or associated with a progressive encephalopathy. The morbidity and mortality of status have dramatically declined in recent years. Overall mortality in recent pediatric series was 3-10%, with almost all fatalities associated with acute central nervous system insults or progressive neurologic disorders. Neurological sequelae in children with idiopathic or febrile status are rare. Neurologically normal children with SE as their first unprovoked seizure have the same risk of experiencing subsequent seizures of any type as children who present with a brief first seizure. The risk of recurrent episodes of convulsive SE approaches 50% in neurologically abnormal children but is very low in neurologically normal children. The favorable outcome of SE in children may be related to advances in therapy and to the resistance of the immature brain to damage from seizures.

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Clinical aspects and biological bases of drug-resistant epilepsies

TL;DR: The definition of drug-resistant epilepsy (DRE) is elusive and still controversial owing to some unresolved questions such as: how many drugs should be tried before a patient is considered intractable; to which extent side-effects may be acceptable; how many years are necessary before establishing drug resistance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Predictors of Intractable Epilepsy in Childhood: A Case‐Control Study

TL;DR: A case‐control study to identify early predictors of medically intractable epilepsy in children to complement those of recent cohort studies of remission of epilepsy and provide useful leads for future prospective studies of intractables epilepsy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Discontinuing antiepileptic drugs in children with epilepsy: a prospective study.

TL;DR: The majority of children with epilepsy in remission while on antiepileptic drug therapy will remain seizure free when medications are withdrawn, and the framework for the clinical decision making for withdrawal of medications in these children is provided.
Journal ArticleDOI

In Whom Does Status Epilepticus Occur: Age‐Related Differences in Children

TL;DR: Status epilepticus is an uncommon but potentially life‐threatening seizure that is most common in children and little is known about the differences within the pediatric age group in terms of the type of patient seen with SE.
Journal ArticleDOI

Do seizures beget seizures? An assessment of the clinical evidence in humans.

TL;DR: The available human data strongly suggest that seizures do not beget seizures and that epilepsy in humans is usually not a progressive disorder.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The epidemiology of epilepsy in Rochester, Minnesota, 1935 through 1967.

TL;DR: Comprehensive review of methods indicates that, although rates may indeed differ among different populations, a major problem is the wide variation in the completeness of case ascertainment and the definitions of epilepsy used.
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A Randomized, Double-Blind Study of Phenytoin for the Prevention of Post-Traumatic Seizures

TL;DR: Penytoin exerts a beneficial effect by reducing seizures only during the first week after severe head injury, and could not be attributed to differential mortality, low phenytoin levels, or treatment of some early seizures in patients assigned to the placebo group.
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Prognosis in Children With Febrile Seizures

TL;DR: Febrile seizures were associated with an increased risk of intellectual deficit only among children with preexisting neurological or developmental abnormality, and in those who developed subsequent afebrile epileptic seizures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Factors Prognostic of Unprovoked Seizures after Febrile Convulsions

TL;DR: The results are consistent with the view that the increased risk of generalized-onset unprovoked seizures reflects a predisposition to both simple febrile convulsions and generalized-ONSet un Provoked seizures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Valproic acid hepatic fatalities: a retrospective review

TL;DR: The primary risk of fatal hepatic dysfunction was found to be in children 0 to 2 years old receiving valproate as polytherapy, and the risk declined with age and was low in patients receiving valProate as monotherapy.
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