4.4 Article

Factors associated with acute symptomatic seizure occurrence among patients with posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome

Journal

EPILEPSY & BEHAVIOR
Volume 134, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.yebeh.2022.108834

Keywords

Predictors; Seizure; Posterior reversible encephalopathy; syndrome; Preeclampsia; Autoimmune disease; Headache

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Acute symptomatic seizures occurred in half of the patients with PRES, mainly within the first 14 days after PRES onset, and convulsive seizures were the most common type. The occurrence of acute symptomatic seizures was directly associated with preeclampsia and autoimmune disease, while headache showed a reverse association.
Objectives: We aimed to define the factors associated with acute symptomatic seizure occurrence in pos-terior reversible encephalopathy syndrome (PRES) in the Thai-Asian population. Materials and methods: We conducted a retrospective cohort study enrolling patients with PRES admitted to the hospital between 2006 and 2019. In addition to seizure characteristics, baseline characteristics, clinical presentations, precipitating factors, neuroimaging characteristics, hospital complications, and hospital outcomes were compared between the seizure and non-seizure groups. Factors with p-value <0.05 in the univariate analysis were entered into the first model of multivariate logistic regression anal-ysis to determine the factors associated with seizure occurrence if the p-value <0.05. The interaction of associated factors was also analyzed in the final multiple logistic regression analysis model. Results: Acute symptomatic seizure, which is mainly based on the clinical documentation without elec-troencephalography, occurred in 50.0% of 136 patients with PRES. Of these, early seizures within 14 days of PRES occurred in 98.5% which mostly developed at presentation (82.4%) with a single seizure attack (55.9%). Convulsive seizures (77.9%) were the most common seizure semiology. The seizure group was significantly younger (median [interquartile range: IQR] 36.00 years old (21.75-48.50) vs 46.50 years old (31.25-61.00), p = 0.003). In univariate analysis, the seizure group had a higher prevalence of con-sciousness impairment (61.76% vs 26.47%, p < 0.001), Glasgow coma scale (GCS) score of 0-13 (42.46% vs 13.23%, p < 0.001), preeclampsia (20.58% vs 4.41%, p = 0.004), autoimmune disease (17.65% vs 5.88%, p = 0.033), and frontal lesions (25.00% vs 11.76%, p = 0.046) than those in the non-seizure group. In contrast, the seizure group had a lower prevalence of headache (27.94% vs 61.76%, p < 0.001). In the final multivariate logistic regression analysis which included the interaction terms, the acute symp-tomatic seizure occurrence directly associated with preeclampsia (adjusted odds ratio (aOR) 6.426, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.450-27.031, p = 0.016) and autoimmune disease (aOR 4.962, 95% CI 1.283-18.642, p = 0.025), while headache showed a reverse association (aOR 0.310, 95% CI = 0.158- 0.721, p = 0.008). Conclusions: Acute symptomatic seizure occurred in a half of patients with PRES in this cohort. Preeclampsia and autoimmune disease were directly associated with seizure occurrence, while headache showed a reverse association. (c) 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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