Cargando…

The incidence, aetiology and outcome of acute seizures in children admitted to a rural Kenyan district hospital

BACKGROUND: Acute seizures are a common cause of paediatric admissions to hospitals in resource poor countries and a risk factor for neurological and cognitive impairment and epilepsy. We determined the incidence, aetiological factors and the immediate outcome of seizures in a rural malaria endemic...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Idro, Richard, Gwer, Samson, Kahindi, Michael, Gatakaa, Hellen, Kazungu, Tony, Ndiritu, Moses, Maitland, Kathryn, Neville, Brian GR, Kager, Piet A, Newton, Charles RJC
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2270816/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18261215
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2431-8-5
_version_ 1782151767135354880
author Idro, Richard
Gwer, Samson
Kahindi, Michael
Gatakaa, Hellen
Kazungu, Tony
Ndiritu, Moses
Maitland, Kathryn
Neville, Brian GR
Kager, Piet A
Newton, Charles RJC
author_facet Idro, Richard
Gwer, Samson
Kahindi, Michael
Gatakaa, Hellen
Kazungu, Tony
Ndiritu, Moses
Maitland, Kathryn
Neville, Brian GR
Kager, Piet A
Newton, Charles RJC
author_sort Idro, Richard
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Acute seizures are a common cause of paediatric admissions to hospitals in resource poor countries and a risk factor for neurological and cognitive impairment and epilepsy. We determined the incidence, aetiological factors and the immediate outcome of seizures in a rural malaria endemic area in coastal Kenya. METHODS: We recruited all children with and without seizures, aged 0–13 years and admitted to Kilifi District hospital over 2 years from 1(st )December 2004 to 30(th )November 2006. Only incident admissions from a defined area were included. Patients with epilepsy were excluded. The population denominator, the number of children in the community on 30(th )November 2005 (study midpoint), was modelled from a census data. RESULTS: Seizures were reported in 900/4,921(18.3%) incident admissions and at least 98 had status epilepticus. The incidence of acute seizures in children 0–13 years was 425 (95%CI 386, 466) per 100,000/year and was 879 (95%CI 795, 968) per 100,000/year in children <5 years. This incidence data may however be an underestimate of the true incidence in the community. Over 80% of the seizures were associated with infections. Neonatal infections (28/43 [65.1%]) and falciparum malaria (476/821 [58.0%]) were the main diseases associated with seizures in neonates and in children six months or older respectively. Falciparum malaria was also the main illness (56/98 [57.1%]) associated with status epilepticus. Other illnesses associated with seizures included pyogenic meningitis, respiratory tract infections and gastroenteritis. Twenty-eight children (3.1%) with seizures died and 11 surviving children (1.3%) had gross neurological deficits on discharge. Status epilepticus, focal seizures, coma, metabolic acidosis, bacteraemia, and pyogenic meningitis were independently associated with mortality; while status epilepticus, hypoxic ischaemic encephalopathy and pyogenic meningitis were independently associated with neurological deficits on discharge. CONCLUSION: There is a high incidence of acute seizures in children living in this malaria endemic area of Kenya. The most important causes are diseases that are preventable with available public health programs.
format Text
id pubmed-2270816
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2008
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-22708162008-03-21 The incidence, aetiology and outcome of acute seizures in children admitted to a rural Kenyan district hospital Idro, Richard Gwer, Samson Kahindi, Michael Gatakaa, Hellen Kazungu, Tony Ndiritu, Moses Maitland, Kathryn Neville, Brian GR Kager, Piet A Newton, Charles RJC BMC Pediatr Research Article BACKGROUND: Acute seizures are a common cause of paediatric admissions to hospitals in resource poor countries and a risk factor for neurological and cognitive impairment and epilepsy. We determined the incidence, aetiological factors and the immediate outcome of seizures in a rural malaria endemic area in coastal Kenya. METHODS: We recruited all children with and without seizures, aged 0–13 years and admitted to Kilifi District hospital over 2 years from 1(st )December 2004 to 30(th )November 2006. Only incident admissions from a defined area were included. Patients with epilepsy were excluded. The population denominator, the number of children in the community on 30(th )November 2005 (study midpoint), was modelled from a census data. RESULTS: Seizures were reported in 900/4,921(18.3%) incident admissions and at least 98 had status epilepticus. The incidence of acute seizures in children 0–13 years was 425 (95%CI 386, 466) per 100,000/year and was 879 (95%CI 795, 968) per 100,000/year in children <5 years. This incidence data may however be an underestimate of the true incidence in the community. Over 80% of the seizures were associated with infections. Neonatal infections (28/43 [65.1%]) and falciparum malaria (476/821 [58.0%]) were the main diseases associated with seizures in neonates and in children six months or older respectively. Falciparum malaria was also the main illness (56/98 [57.1%]) associated with status epilepticus. Other illnesses associated with seizures included pyogenic meningitis, respiratory tract infections and gastroenteritis. Twenty-eight children (3.1%) with seizures died and 11 surviving children (1.3%) had gross neurological deficits on discharge. Status epilepticus, focal seizures, coma, metabolic acidosis, bacteraemia, and pyogenic meningitis were independently associated with mortality; while status epilepticus, hypoxic ischaemic encephalopathy and pyogenic meningitis were independently associated with neurological deficits on discharge. CONCLUSION: There is a high incidence of acute seizures in children living in this malaria endemic area of Kenya. The most important causes are diseases that are preventable with available public health programs. BioMed Central 2008-02-08 /pmc/articles/PMC2270816/ /pubmed/18261215 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2431-8-5 Text en Copyright © 2008 Idro et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Idro, Richard
Gwer, Samson
Kahindi, Michael
Gatakaa, Hellen
Kazungu, Tony
Ndiritu, Moses
Maitland, Kathryn
Neville, Brian GR
Kager, Piet A
Newton, Charles RJC
The incidence, aetiology and outcome of acute seizures in children admitted to a rural Kenyan district hospital
title The incidence, aetiology and outcome of acute seizures in children admitted to a rural Kenyan district hospital
title_full The incidence, aetiology and outcome of acute seizures in children admitted to a rural Kenyan district hospital
title_fullStr The incidence, aetiology and outcome of acute seizures in children admitted to a rural Kenyan district hospital
title_full_unstemmed The incidence, aetiology and outcome of acute seizures in children admitted to a rural Kenyan district hospital
title_short The incidence, aetiology and outcome of acute seizures in children admitted to a rural Kenyan district hospital
title_sort incidence, aetiology and outcome of acute seizures in children admitted to a rural kenyan district hospital
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2270816/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18261215
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2431-8-5
work_keys_str_mv AT idrorichard theincidenceaetiologyandoutcomeofacuteseizuresinchildrenadmittedtoaruralkenyandistricthospital
AT gwersamson theincidenceaetiologyandoutcomeofacuteseizuresinchildrenadmittedtoaruralkenyandistricthospital
AT kahindimichael theincidenceaetiologyandoutcomeofacuteseizuresinchildrenadmittedtoaruralkenyandistricthospital
AT gatakaahellen theincidenceaetiologyandoutcomeofacuteseizuresinchildrenadmittedtoaruralkenyandistricthospital
AT kazungutony theincidenceaetiologyandoutcomeofacuteseizuresinchildrenadmittedtoaruralkenyandistricthospital
AT ndiritumoses theincidenceaetiologyandoutcomeofacuteseizuresinchildrenadmittedtoaruralkenyandistricthospital
AT maitlandkathryn theincidenceaetiologyandoutcomeofacuteseizuresinchildrenadmittedtoaruralkenyandistricthospital
AT nevillebriangr theincidenceaetiologyandoutcomeofacuteseizuresinchildrenadmittedtoaruralkenyandistricthospital
AT kagerpieta theincidenceaetiologyandoutcomeofacuteseizuresinchildrenadmittedtoaruralkenyandistricthospital
AT newtoncharlesrjc theincidenceaetiologyandoutcomeofacuteseizuresinchildrenadmittedtoaruralkenyandistricthospital
AT idrorichard incidenceaetiologyandoutcomeofacuteseizuresinchildrenadmittedtoaruralkenyandistricthospital
AT gwersamson incidenceaetiologyandoutcomeofacuteseizuresinchildrenadmittedtoaruralkenyandistricthospital
AT kahindimichael incidenceaetiologyandoutcomeofacuteseizuresinchildrenadmittedtoaruralkenyandistricthospital
AT gatakaahellen incidenceaetiologyandoutcomeofacuteseizuresinchildrenadmittedtoaruralkenyandistricthospital
AT kazungutony incidenceaetiologyandoutcomeofacuteseizuresinchildrenadmittedtoaruralkenyandistricthospital
AT ndiritumoses incidenceaetiologyandoutcomeofacuteseizuresinchildrenadmittedtoaruralkenyandistricthospital
AT maitlandkathryn incidenceaetiologyandoutcomeofacuteseizuresinchildrenadmittedtoaruralkenyandistricthospital
AT nevillebriangr incidenceaetiologyandoutcomeofacuteseizuresinchildrenadmittedtoaruralkenyandistricthospital
AT kagerpieta incidenceaetiologyandoutcomeofacuteseizuresinchildrenadmittedtoaruralkenyandistricthospital
AT newtoncharlesrjc incidenceaetiologyandoutcomeofacuteseizuresinchildrenadmittedtoaruralkenyandistricthospital