Objective: In 2015, the International League Against Epilepsy (ILAE) proposed a new definition of status epilepticus (SE): 5 minutes of ongoing seizure activity to diagnose convulsive SE (CSE, ie, bilateral tonic-clonic SE) and 10 minutes for focal SE and absence SE, rather than the earlier criterion of 30 minutes. Based on semiology, several types of SE with prominent motor phenomena at any time (including CSE) were distinguished from those without (ie, nonconvulsive SE, NCSE). We present the first population-based incidence study applying the new 2015 ILAE definition and classification of SE and report the impact of the evolution of semiology and level of consciousness (LOC) on outcome. Methods: We conducted a retrospective population-based incidence study of all adult patients with SE residing in the city of Salzburg between January 2011 and December 2015. Patients with hypoxic encephalopathy were excluded. SE was defined and classified according to the ILAE 2015. Results: We identified 221 patients with a median age of 69 years (range 20-99 years). The age-and sex-adjusted incidence of a first episode of SE, NCSE, and SE with prominent motor phenomena (including CSE) was 36.1 (95% confidence interval [CI] 26.2-48.5), 12.1 (95% CI 6.8-20.0), and 24.0 (95% CI 16.0-34.5; including CSE 15.8 [95% CI 9.4-24.8]) per 100 000 adults per year, respectively.None of the patients whose SE ended with or consisted of only bilateral tonic-clonic activity died. In all other clinical presentations, case fatality was lower in awake patients (8.2%) compared with patients with impaired consciousness (33%). Significance: This first population-based study using the ILAE 2015 definition and classification of SE found an increase of incidence of 10% compared to previous definitions. We also provide epidemiologic evidence that different patterns of status evolution and LOCs have strong prognostic implications.Leitinger and Trinka joint first authors ---
Objective: To characterize the clinical, EEG, and brain imaging findings in an adult case series of patients with de novo refractory status epilepticus (SE) occurring after a febrile illness.Methods: A retrospective study (2010)(2011)(2012)(2013) was undertaken with the following inclusion criteria: (1) previously healthy adults with refractory SE; (2) seizure onset 0-21 days after a febrile illness; (3) lacking evidence of infectious agents in CSF; (4) no history of seizures (febrile or afebrile) or previous or concomitant neurologic disorder.Results: Among 155 refractory SE cases observed in the study period, 6 patients (17-35 years old) fulfilled the inclusion criteria. Confusion and stupor were the most common symptoms at disease onset, followed after a few days by acute repeated seizures that were uncountable in all but one. Seizures consisted of focal motor/myoclonic phenomena with subsequent generalization. Antiepileptic drugs failed in every patient to control seizures, with all participants requiring intensive care unit admission. Barbiturate coma with burst-suppression pattern was applied in 4 out of 6 patients for 5-14 days. One participant died in the acute phase. In each patient, we observed a reversible bilateral claustrum MRI hyperintensity on T2-weighted sequences, without restricted diffusion, time-related with SE. All patients had negative multiple neural antibodies testing. Four out of 5 surviving patients developed chronic epilepsy.Conclusions: This is a hypothesis-generating study of a preliminary nature supporting the role of the claustrum in postfebrile de novo SE; future prospective studies are needed to delineate the specificity of this condition, its pathogenesis, and the etiology. Neurology ® 2015;85:1224-1232 GLOSSARY ADC 5 apparent diffusion coefficient; AED 5 antiepileptic drug; FIRES 5 febrile infection-related epilepsy syndrome; ICU 5 intensive care unit; IVIg 5 IV immunoglobulin; NORSE 5 new-onset refractory status epilepticus; PEX 5 plasma exchange; SE 5 status epilepticus.In the last 2 decades, several authors described a series of syndromes characterized by the development of a difficult to treat status epilepticus (SE) in previously healthy children after a febrile illness.1-7 The condition is characterized by a refractory SE and followed by drug-resistant epilepsy, with often severe neuropsychiatric sequelae or death. These entities have been identified by different acronyms, but febrile infection-related epilepsy syndrome (FIRES) is the one that best underscores the main features of the disorder.8 Cases with a similar clinical picture have been described also in adults and in these case series the most frequently used definition is new-onset refractory SE (NORSE).9-13 Recently, it was pointed out that different terms probably have been used to describe the same condition.14,15 However, there is no consensus among investigators. Adult cases are more heterogeneous, some with clear similarities with FIRES cases (with only the age at onset as the main difference), other...
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