“…The most consistently noted factors associated with an increased risk of seizure recurrence following an unprovoked first seizure include a prior brain lesion or insult causing the seizure, 3,11,13,19,23,24 an EEG with epileptiform abnormalities (characterized by spikes or sharp waves), 3,[11][12][13][16][17][18][19]23,24 a significant brain-imaging abnormality (judged the cause of the seizure), 3,6,9,20,24 and a nocturnal seizure. 16,17 Of 2 Class I 11,13 and 2 Class II studies, 19,20 most confirm that individuals with a seizure related to a prior brain lesion 11,13,19,20 (including those due to stroke, trauma, CNS infection, cerebral palsy, and cognitive developmental disability), a so-called "remote symptomatic" seizure, 5,11,23,24 demonstrate an approximately 2-foldhigher risk of seizure recurrence. That increased risk is illustrated in a representative study with seizure recurrence rates of 26%, 41%, and 48% at 1, 3, and 5 years, respectively, as compared with 10%, 24%, and 29% at these same intervals for patients with a seizure of unknown cause.…”