Background: Transient symptoms in Alzheimer disease (AD) are frequent and include seizures, syncope, and episodes of inattention or confusion. The incidence of seizures in AD and predictors of which patients with AD might be more predisposed to them is based primarily on retrospective studies and is not well established.
Objective: To determine the incidence and predictors of new-onset unprovoked seizures.
Purpose: To investigate the cumulative probabilities of >or=12 month seizure remission and seizure relapse following remission, and to test the associations of clinical characteristics with these two study end points in a prevalence cohort of intractable adult epilepsy patients during medical management.
Methods: A retrospective cohort study of intractable epilepsy patients seen in 2001 at a single center was conducted. Kaplan-Meier analysis was used to estimate the cumulative probabilities of seizure remission and subsequent seizure relapse.