Login / Signup

Early-life epilepsy after acute symptomatic neonatal seizures: A prospective multicenter study.

Renée A ShellhaasCourtney J WusthoffAdam L NumisCatherine J ChuShavonne L MasseyNicholas S AbendJanet S SoulTaeun ChangMonica E LemmonCameron ThomasNancy A McNamaraRonnie GuilletLinda S FranckJulie SturzaCharles E McCullochHannah C Glass
Published in: Epilepsia (2021)
In this multicenter study, only 13% of infants with acute symptomatic neonatal seizures developed post-neonatal epilepsy by age 24-months. However, there was a high risk of severe neurodevelopmental impairment and drug-resistant seizures among children with post-neonatal epilepsy. Days of EEG-confirmed neonatal seizures was a potentially modifiable epilepsy risk factor. An EEG at three months was not clinically useful for predicting epilepsy. These practice changing findings have implications for family counseling, clinical follow-up planning, and future research to prevent post-neonatal epilepsy.
Keyphrases