2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.seizure.2017.02.004
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Epidemiological study of mortality in epilepsy in a Spanish population

Abstract: This is the first epidemiological study to examine rate of mortality in epilepsy in a Southern European country. The identified mortality pattern is similar to the one provided by researchers from developed countries. The similarities between our results concerning epilepsy-related deaths and those provided by population-based studies are the result of the scarcely selected character of our study cohort.

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Cited by 14 publications
(14 citation statements)
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References 29 publications
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“…Similar results have been reported by Neligan et al 13 for the United Kingdom and Loiseau et al 14 for southern France, although in this second study, the patients were only followed for 1 year. The study conducted by Chamorro-Muñoz et al 8 in southern Spain, which had a similar follow-up duration to ours and was also performed in an outpatient setting, detected an SMR of 2.11, but this lower rate can probably be explained by differences in patient selection. In our series, mortality was most marked in middle-aged adults, whereas in the study by Chamorro-Muñoz et al, it was higher in the younger age-groups.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 71%
“…Similar results have been reported by Neligan et al 13 for the United Kingdom and Loiseau et al 14 for southern France, although in this second study, the patients were only followed for 1 year. The study conducted by Chamorro-Muñoz et al 8 in southern Spain, which had a similar follow-up duration to ours and was also performed in an outpatient setting, detected an SMR of 2.11, but this lower rate can probably be explained by differences in patient selection. In our series, mortality was most marked in middle-aged adults, whereas in the study by Chamorro-Muñoz et al, it was higher in the younger age-groups.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 71%
“…This may require better screening and early treatment for those at risk. The increased risk of suicide in also worrying and occurred in multiple older and newer studies worldwide (Chamorro-Munoz et al 2017;Chang et al 2012;Day et al 2005;Ding et al 2006;Ding et al 2013;Granbichler et al 2015;Mohanraj et al 2006;Mu et al 2011;Rafnsson et al 2001;Shackleton et al 1999;White et al 1979). It may be that more needs to be done to manage mental health problems in PWE.…”
Section: J O U R N a L P R E -P R O O F 18mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the elderly general population, fracture is associated with mortality and chronic diseases, and postfracture chronic disease development may be involved in the fracture‐mortality association . The most common causes of death for individuals with epilepsy include chronic diseases (eg, cardiovascular and respiratory disease), injuries (eg, seizures, falls), and cancer . Therefore, the current study provides new potential insights into factors that may be involved directly with mortality or indirectly with mortality via early pathological processes for adults with epilepsy, as NTFx is an adverse outcome of injuries (eg, seizures, falls) and increases risk of chronic diseases.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 93%