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. 2001;12(4):331-4.
doi: 10.1159/000047730.

Epileptic seizures following subcortical infarcts

Affiliations

Epileptic seizures following subcortical infarcts

C Bentes et al. Cerebrovasc Dis. 2001.

Abstract

Stroke is one of the most frequent causes of seizures in adulthood. Subcortical infarcts have been associated with post-stroke epileptic seizures, although less frequently than cortical ischaemia. We studied 113 patients from a hospital stroke registry. The patients had subcortical non-lacunar infarcts (64 striatocapsular infarcts, 13 thalamic, 8 choroidal artery territory, 28 internal border zone and white matter medullary infarcts) and at least 1 year of follow-up. Only 4 patients (3.5%) with striatocapsular infarcts suffered an epileptic seizure. Two seizures occurred within the first 24 h, 1 within the first month and 1 within the first year of stroke onset. Emboligenic cardiac conditions were significantly more common in patients with seizures (difference 37%; 95% confidence intervals 2-72%). Subsequently to subcortical infarct, epileptic seizures are infrequent, tend to occur early after stroke and have a very low 1-year recurrence risk.

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