Characteristics of epilepsy in severely mentally retarded individuals

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Abstract

In order to clarify the characteristics of epilepsy in patients with severe mentally retarded (SMR) subjects, we analyzed 52 SMR subjects with epilepsy from the institute for SMR subjects at Kikuchi National Hospital, Kumamoto, Japan. A total of 61.5% patients had uncontrolled seizures which were resistant to treatment. The most common combinations of seizure types in those not responding to conventional anticonvulsants were generalized tonic- clonic seizures (GTCS) with tonic seizure and GTCS with atypical absence. Their clinical features were characterized by spastic paralysis associated with a slower background electroencephalogram and abnormal computed tomography scans of the head, suggesting the involvement of cortical damage. These findings suggest that a large proportion of epilepsy in SMR subjects does not respond to treatment and that the severity of organic brain damage may therefore affect the natural course of epilepsy in such patients.

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Amano, K., Takamatsu, J., Ogata, A., Miyazaki, C., Kaneyama, H., Katsuragi, S., … Miyakawa, T. (2000). Characteristics of epilepsy in severely mentally retarded individuals. Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences, 54(1), 17–22. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1440-1819.2000.00630.x

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