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a Rehabilitation Research Unit, Southampton General Hospital, Southampton SO9 4XY, b Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Western General Hospital, Edinburgh EH4 2XU, c Department of Neurology, St James's University Hospital, Leeds LS9 7TF, d Rivermead Rehabilitation Centre, Oxford OX1 4XD
Correspondence to: Dr Burn rehab@soton.ac.uk
Objective: To describe the immediate and long term
risk of epileptic seizures after a first ever stroke.
Design: Cohort study following up stroke survivors
for 2 to 6.5 years; comparison with age specific incidence rates of epileptic seizures in the
general
population.
Setting: Community based stroke register.
Subjects: 675 patients with a first stroke, followed
up
for a minimum of 2 years.
Main outcome measures: Occurrence of single and
recurrent seizures.
Results: 52 patients had one or more post stroke
seizures; in 25 the seizures were recurrent. The 5 year actuarial risk of a post stroke seizure in
survivors (excluding 19 patients with a history of epilepsy and 3 patients in whom the seizure
occurred shortly before death from another cause) was 11.5% (95% confidence
interval 4.8% to 18.2%). The relative risk of seizures, in comparison with the
general
population, was estimated at 35.2 in the first year after stroke and 19.0 in year 2. The risk of
seizures was increased in survivors of subarachnoid and intracerebral haemorrhage (hazard ratio
for
intracranial haemorrhage v cerebral infarction 10.2 (3.7
to
27.9)). The risk of seizures after ischaemic stroke was substantial only in patients presenting with
severe strokes due to total anterior circulation infarction. Only 9 of 295 patients (3%)
independent one month after stroke suffered a seizure between 1 month and 5 years (actuarial
risk
4.2% (0.1% to 8.3%)).
Conclusion: Stroke patients have about an
11.5% risk of single or recurrent seizures in the first 5 years after a stroke. Patients with
more
severe strokes or haemorrhagic strokes are at higher risk.
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