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Door-to-Door Survey of Major Neurological
Disorders in Al Kharga District, New Valley, Egypt:
Methodological Aspects

Research Authors
Hamdy N.A. El Tallawy a
Wafaa M.A. Farghaly a
Nabil A. Metwaly b
Tarek A. Rageh a
Ghaydaa A. Shehata a
Noha Abo Elfetoh a
Ahmed M. Hegazy b
Esam A. El-Moselhy b
Ibrahim Rayan c
Bastawy M.A. Al-Fawal c
Mohamed A. Abd Elhamed a
Research Journal
Neuroepidemiology
Research Publisher
2010 S. Karger AG, Basel
Research Rank
1
Research Vol
35
Research Website
www.karger.com/ned DOI: 10.1159/000314345
Research Year
2010
Research_Pages
185–190
Research Abstract

Epidemiology of neurological disorders is still lacking in Egypt. The door-to-door method is the most suitable one to screen neurological disorders in our country. Over a 4-year period (June 1, 2005 to May 31, 2009), screening and examination had been carried out to ascertain the incidence and prevalence rate of epilepsy, stroke, cerebral palsy and Bell’s palsy, as well as the prevalence of dementia, extrapyramidal
syndromes, muscle and neuromuscular disorders, cerebellar ataxia and primary nocturnal enuresis among the urban and rural population of Al Kharga District, New Valley, Egypt. A total of 62,583 people were screened by 3 neurologists in a door-to-door manner, including every door, using a standardized Arabic questionnaire to detect any patient with a
neurological disorder. This was a project study of neurological disorders including 3 stages: first stage (June 1, 2005 to May 31, 2006) for data collection, designing a standardized questionnaire and screening; second stage (June 1, 2006 to May 31, 2008) for case ascertainment, classification of logical disorders and investigations, and third stage (June 1, 2007 to May 31, 2009) for data entry and statistical analysis.
The results of this study revealed that the total prevalence rate of neurological disorders in Al Kharga District, New Valley was 2.4/100 with no significant difference among both sexes. The highest prevalence rate was recorded among elderly people (60+ years; 9.25%) and among children ( ^18 years; 2.9%).