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Medline ® Abstract for Reference 55

of 'Seizures and epilepsy in older adults: Etiology, clinical presentation, and diagnosis'

55
TI
Idiopathic generalized epilepsy of late onset.
AU
Loiseau J, Crespel A, Picot MC, DuchéB, AyriviéN, Jallon P, Loiseau P
SO
Seizure. 1998;7(6):485.
 
Most idiopathic generalized epilepsies have an onset in childhood or adolescence, with a moderate second incidence peak in the presenium predominantly in women. This study addressed the question of a later onset. The available literature and the records of four personal data sets (two prospective incidence surveys of epileptic seizures, one prevalence study of epilepsy, and one clinical series of individuals with epilepsy) were screened for patients who had experienced a first generalized convulsive seizure with bilateral spike-wave complexes on EEG after 60 years of age. Reports of first idiopathic generalized tonic-clonic seizures occurring after age 60 were extremely rare and none was found in our four cohorts regardless of the methodology involved. Only five case reports were found, all involving a woman. Two had a family history of seizure disorders and two had had at least one seizure earlier in life. Idiopathic generalized epilepsy of late onset, if this condition actually exists, is likely to be the consequence of a genetic predisposition triggered by acquired epileptogenic factors.
AD
Department of Neurology, University Hospital, Bordeaux, France.
PMID