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Purpose: To assess the advantages of the 2001 ILAE proposed diagnostic scheme for classification of newborns with epileptic seizures over the 1989 ILAE classification.

Method: Clinical features, seizure semiology and duration, neurological evaluation, ictal and interictal EEG, brain imaging and outcome at the end of the neonatal period (44 weeks post-conceptional age) of 94 newborns with EEG confirmed seizures were analyzed. The 2001 ILAE classification was applied where possible.

Results: Twenty patients died before the end of the neonatal period. In the remaining patients, applying axis 3, we classified 54 newborns as having epileptic seizures that do not require a diagnosis of epilepsy; 14 as symptomatic partial epilepsy; 5 within the neonatal epileptic syndromes and one as benign neonatal seizures (NS). Axis 4 in all newborns provided a valuable tool in order to better define the individual patient.

Conclusions: Compared to the 1989 ILAE classification, which allowed a syndromic diagnosis in only 6/94 patients, the remaining being classified as Epilepsies and Syndromes undetermined whether focal or generalized, the 2001 ILAE diagnostic scheme, applied at the end of the neonatal period, offers a variety of approaches to classification, allowing an early distinction between epilepsy and single or isolated clusters of seizures, with therapeutic and prognostic implications.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.seizure.2005.04.001DOI Listing

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