TY - JOUR PY - 2018// TI - Is concussion a risk factor for epilepsy? JO - Canadian journal of neurological sciences A1 - Wennberg, Richard A1 - Hiploylee, Carmen A1 - Tai, Peter A1 - Tator, Charles H. SP - 275 EP - 282 VL - 45 IS - 3 N2 - BACKGROUND: Epidemiologic studies have suggested that concussion, or mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI), is associated with a twofold or greater increase in relative risk for the development of post-traumatic epilepsy. To assess the clinical validity of these findings, we analyzed the incidence of epilepsy in a large cohort of post-concussion patients in whom concussion was strictly defined according to international guidelines.

METHODS: A retrospective cohort study of 330 consecutive post-concussion patients followed by a single concussion specialist. EXCLUSION CRITERIA: abnormal brain CT/MRI, Glasgow Coma Scale48 hours. Independent variable: concussion. OUTCOME MEASURE: epilepsy incidence (dependent variable).

RESULTS: The mean number of concussions/patient was 3.3 (±2.5), mean age at first clinic visit 28 years (±14.7), and mean follow-up after first concussion 7.6 years (±10.8). Eight patients were identified whose medical records included mention of seizures or convulsions or epilepsy. Upon review by an epileptologist none met criteria for a definite diagnosis of epilepsy: four had episodic symptoms incompatible with epileptic seizures (e.g., multifocal paraesthesiae, multimodality hallucinations, classic migraine) and normal EEG/MRI investigations; four had syncopal (n=2) or concussive (n=2) convulsions. Compared with annual incidence (0.5/1000 individuals) in the general population, there was no difference in this post-concussion cohort (p=0.49).

CONCLUSION: In this large cohort of post-concussion patients we found no increased incidence of epilepsy. For at least the first 5-10 years post-injury, concussion/mTBI should not be considered a significant risk factor for epilepsy. In patients with epilepsy and a past history of concussion, the epilepsy should not be presumed to be post-traumatic.

Language: en

LA - en SN - 0317-1671 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cjn.2017.300 ID - ref1 ER -