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Community-based epidemiological study of epilepsy in the Qena governorate in Upper Egypt, a door-to-door survey.

Research Authors
Fawi G1, Khedr EM2, El-Fetoh NA2, Thabit MN3, Abbass MA4, Zaki AF4.
Research Journal
Epilepsy Res. 2015
Research Publisher
Copyright © 2015 Elsevier B.V.
Research Rank
1
Research Vol
Jul;113:
Research Website
pubmed
Research Year
2015
Research_Pages
68-75.
Research Abstract

Abstract
BACKGROUND:
The aim of this study is to estimate the epidemiological features of epilepsy in a representative governorate of Upper Egypt.
MATERIALS AND METHODS:
A door-to-door community-based survey study was performed using a sample of 10 areas among various districts of the Qena governorate in Upper Egypt. Six were classified as rural areas, and the remaining four were classified as urban areas, with a total population of 8027 inhabitants. The population was screened using an epilepsy-screening questionnaire. Positive cases with suspected epilepsy were referred to Qena University Hospital to be further evaluated by a qualified neurologist and for further investigations, such as neuroimaging and electroencephalography.
RESULTS:
One hundred patients had a confirmed diagnosis of epilepsy, with a lifetime prevalence of 12.46/1000. The active prevalence rate of epilepsy was 2.12/1000, while the incidence rate was 123/100000. Seventy-six percent of the patients had idiopathic epilepsies, while 24% had symptomatic epilepsy. Generalized epilepsies were more common (70.1%) than partial epilepsy (26.3%), meanwhile epilepsies with mixed seizure types were 2.6%. The most common seizure type was generalized tonic clonic seizures (51.8%). The age-specific prevalence rate of epilepsy was much higher in infancy and early childhood (62.5 and 37.04/1000, respectively), which regressed steadily with age. Idiopathic epilepsies were significantly more common in urban areas than in rural areas (P=0.01), while symptomatic epilepsies were more common in rural areas than in urban areas (P<0.005).
CONCLUSION:
Upper Egypt is characterized by a relatively high incidence and prevalence of epilepsy and epilepsy-related medical service, and more cultural education should be directed to those areas in Egypt.
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