TY - JOUR
T1 - A population-based survey of childhood epilepsy in okayama prefecture, japan
T2 - Reclassification by a newly proposed diagnostic scheme of epilepsies in 2001
AU - Akiyama, Tomoyuki
AU - Kobayashi, Katsuhiro
AU - Ogino, Tatsuya
AU - Yoshinaga, Harumi
AU - Oka, Eiji
AU - Oka, Makio
AU - Ito, Minako
AU - Ohtsuka, Yoko
PY - 2006/8
Y1 - 2006/8
N2 - The purpose of this study is to clarify the usefulness and problems of the newly proposed classification of epilepsies (International League Against Epilepsy: ILAE, 2001) in the epidemiological studies of epilepsy. We previously conducted an epidemiological study in Okayama Prefecture, Japan, in 1999, using the ILAE 1989 classification. Among 250,997 children under 13 years of age, 2220 epileptic patients were ascertained. In this study, we reclassified them according to the ILAE 2001 classification, focusing on axes 2 (seizure types) and 3 (syndromes). We were able to classify 1803 (95.0%) seizure types out of 1899 with detailed clinical information. In focal seizures, the most common were secondarily generalized seizures (88.6%), which generally do not represent a unique anatomic substrate. In generalized seizures, topic-clonic seizures (40.7%) and spasms (21.0%) were the most common.We identified only 269 (12.1%) patients with specific epilepsy syndromes out of the 2220. We classified 1761 patients without specific syndromic diagnoses only by axis 2, but the new concept of epileptic seizure types, representing a unique pathophysiologic mechanism and anatomic substrate, was not very meaningful in most cases, even in those with focal seizures.
AB - The purpose of this study is to clarify the usefulness and problems of the newly proposed classification of epilepsies (International League Against Epilepsy: ILAE, 2001) in the epidemiological studies of epilepsy. We previously conducted an epidemiological study in Okayama Prefecture, Japan, in 1999, using the ILAE 1989 classification. Among 250,997 children under 13 years of age, 2220 epileptic patients were ascertained. In this study, we reclassified them according to the ILAE 2001 classification, focusing on axes 2 (seizure types) and 3 (syndromes). We were able to classify 1803 (95.0%) seizure types out of 1899 with detailed clinical information. In focal seizures, the most common were secondarily generalized seizures (88.6%), which generally do not represent a unique anatomic substrate. In generalized seizures, topic-clonic seizures (40.7%) and spasms (21.0%) were the most common.We identified only 269 (12.1%) patients with specific epilepsy syndromes out of the 2220. We classified 1761 patients without specific syndromic diagnoses only by axis 2, but the new concept of epileptic seizure types, representing a unique pathophysiologic mechanism and anatomic substrate, was not very meaningful in most cases, even in those with focal seizures.
KW - Childhood epilepsy
KW - Epidemiology
KW - General population
KW - ILAE classification
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U2 - 10.1016/j.eplepsyres.2005.11.017
DO - 10.1016/j.eplepsyres.2005.11.017
M3 - Article
C2 - 16815677
AN - SCOPUS:33750587197
SN - 0920-1211
VL - 70
SP - 34
EP - 40
JO - Journal of Epilepsy
JF - Journal of Epilepsy
IS - SUPPL.1
ER -