Prevalence of essential tremor in urban Lagos, Nigeria: A door-to-door community-based study

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Abstract

Background: Essential tremor (ET) is one of the commonest movement disorders though the prevalence varies globally. There is paucity of data on ET prevalence in sub-Saharan Africa. The study aimed to determine the prevalence of ET in a Nigerian community.Methods: This door-to-door survey was conducted in two stages. In Stage 1, 3000 randomly selected residents of an urban centre in Lagos, Nigeria, were screened using a questionnaire to detect symptoms of movement disorder. 234 participants who responded positively regarding presence of tremors were rescreened using an ET-specific questionnaire, a face-to-face interview and neurological examination. Diagnosis of ET was based on the Movement Disorders Society (MDS) consensus diagnostic criteria for ET.Results: Of the 3000 participants, forty responded positively to the ET screening questionnaire, of which 36 (19 females and 17 males) had a final diagnosis of ET, giving a crude prevalence of 12 per 1000 (95% CI = 8.1- 15.9). Gender specific prevalence was 10.3 /1000 in males and 14.3/1000 in females. Age specific prevalence increased with advancing age in both sexes. Age adjusted prevalence (WHO New world population) was 23.8 per 1000.Conclusions: We documented a high prevalence of ET in this study, with typical increasing prevalence with advancing age as previously reported in other populations. © 2012 Okubadejo et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

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Okubadejo, N. U., Bankole, I. A., Ojo, O. O., Ojini, F. I., & Danesi, M. A. (2012). Prevalence of essential tremor in urban Lagos, Nigeria: A door-to-door community-based study. BMC Neurology, 12. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2377-12-110

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