epidemiology
Last reviewed 01/2018
The incidence of status epilepticus is 20/100,000 for Caucasians in industrialised countries (1).
- the incidence of SE has a bimodal distribution
- the first peak seen during the first year of life while the second peak occuring after the age of 60 years
- among adults, the highest risk of developing SE is seen in patients older than 60, with an incidence of 86 per 100,000 persons per year
- among children, the highest incidence and prevalence of SE was observed in babies less than 12 months (1)
Status epilepticus occurs most frequently in patients without a prior diagnosis of epilepsy;
- 5% of adults with epilepsy will experience at least one episode of status epilepticus
- the common causes of status epilepticus in a patient with a prior diagnosis of epilepsy are:
- drug withdrawal
- intercurrent illness
- metabolic disturbance
- progression of the underlying disease
Mortality rates related to SE is around 7% in children while in adults it is around 28%. An increase in mortality is seen with age, duration of SE and the underlying cause (2).
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