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Neonatal Seizures: Incidence, Etiologies, Clinical Features and EEG Findings in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit

Abstract

Su-Ching Hu, Kun-Long Hung and Hui-Ju Chen

Objective: To evaluate the incidence, etiologies, clinical features and EEG findings of seizures among the neonates admitted to one medical center.
Method: We retrospectively reviewed the medical records of neonates who were diagnosed to have neonatal seizure at the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) of one medical center in Taiwan from January to December 2015. The clinical pictures, laboratory data, image and EEG findings were reviewed in all cases.
Results: Neonatal seizures were diagnosed in 22 among 122 neonatal admissions in NICU in 2015. The most common type of seizures observed were subtle (77.2%), followed by tonic (13.7%) and clonic (9.1%) seizures. Acidosis was noted in cases with perinatal asphyxia and shock. The other laboratory data was non-contributory. Seventeen (77.3%) cases had abnormal EEG (focal spikes in majority) and 12 (54.5%) cases had abnormal image findings. Perinatal asphyxia (59.1%) was the most common cause of neonatal seizures, followed by CNS infection (18.2%), malformation syndrome (9.1%) and intracranial hemorrhage (9.1%).
Conclusion: Neonatal seizures were found in about 18% of our NICU admissions in one year and the most common was subtle type. Perinatal asphyxia was the most common etiology of neonatal seizures, followed by CNS infection. EEG plays a major role in the diagnosis and follow-up of neonatal seizures.

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