Status Epilepticus in a Tertiary Care Hospital in Morocco: A Retrospective Analysis

Background Status epilepticus (SE) is a common neurologic emergency with high rates of mortality and morbidity. Objective To analyze the clinical characteristics, causes, management, and outcomes of patients with SE in a tertiary care hospital in Morocco. Methods A retrospective study was conducted...

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Veröffentlicht in:Curēus (Palo Alto, CA) CA), 2023-12, Vol.15 (12), p.e50591-e50591
Hauptverfasser: Bechri, Ibrahim, Shimi, Abdelkrarim, Derkaoui, Ali, Khatouf, Mohammed
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background Status epilepticus (SE) is a common neurologic emergency with high rates of mortality and morbidity. Objective To analyze the clinical characteristics, causes, management, and outcomes of patients with SE in a tertiary care hospital in Morocco. Methods A retrospective study was conducted from January 2019 to December 2021, including all patients admitted to the medico-surgical general intensive care unit (ICU) with a diagnosis of SE. We recorded demographic characteristics, SE clinical history, management, causes, and discharge outcomes. Results Overall, 82 patients with SE were included, the median age was 39.5 years (18-95), 61% of the patients were male, the majority of semiology was convulsive SE (93%, N: 77), epilepsy of unknown cause was the most common diagnosis (41.2%, N: 34), and the most known etiology was acute/subacute cerebrovascular events (12 patients, 14.4%). All patients received benzodiazepines, 96.4% of them received phenobarbital as a second line of treatment, 65 patients required anesthesia, 52 patients developed one complication at least - the most common complication being systemic infection, and the mortality rate was noted to be 38% among patients with SE (N: 31). In this study, the factors associated with mortality were ischemic stroke (as an etiology of SE (p=0.048), history of epilepsy (p=0.005), poor therapeutic adherence (p=0.001), cardiovascular complications, presence of multiple complications (p=0.0001), pneumonia (p=0.0001), and the recurrence of SE (p=0.050). Conclusions We provide a single-center retrospective analysis of admissions in SE and note that mortality among SE patients is high in our settings. Improving prehospital emergency care and implementing elective ICU admission for patients at high risk could improve the mortality rate.
ISSN:2168-8184
2168-8184
DOI:10.7759/cureus.50591