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Seizure-related deaths in children: The expanding spectrum

Journal

EPILEPSIA
Volume 62, Issue 3, Pages 570-582

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/epi.16833

Keywords

mortality; seizures; SIDS; SUDC; SUDEP

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Seizures in children are often overlooked as a potential cause of death, both in those with and without an epilepsy diagnosis. Miscarriages are more common among individuals with a personal or family history of epilepsy, suggesting a possible link between fetal losses and epileptic factors. Accurately estimating and understanding the mechanisms of seizure-related deaths in children is crucial for developing effective education and interventions to prevent these tragedies.
Although seizures are common in children, they are often overlooked as a potential cause of death. Febrile and nonfebrile seizures can be fatal in children with or without an epilepsy diagnosis and may go unrecognized by parents or physicians. Sudden unexpected infant deaths, sudden unexplained death in childhood, and sudden unexpected death in epilepsy share clinical, neuropathological, and genetic features, including male predominance, unwitnessed deaths, death during sleep, discovery in the prone position, hippocampal abnormalities, and variants in genes regulating cardiac and neuronal excitability. Additionally, epidemiological studies reveal that miscarriages are more common among individuals with a personal or family history of epilepsy, suggesting that some fetal losses may result from epileptic factors. The spectrum of seizure-related deaths in pediatrics is wide and underappreciated; accurately estimating this mortality and understanding its mechanism in children is critical to developing effective education and interventions to prevent these tragedies.

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