AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the seasonality of new-onset refractory status epilepticus (NORSE) and its subtype, FIRES, suggesting that these conditions may be immune-related and influenced by infection.
  • An analysis of 342 cases from the northern hemisphere revealed that NORSE incidents peaked in summer (32.2%) and were lowest in spring (19.0%), with significant seasonal differences noted (p = .0068).
  • While both types of NORSE (FIRES and non-FIRES) were more frequent in summer, there was a tendency for FIRES cases to occur more often in winter compared to non-FIRES cases, indicating different seasonal patterns related to their underlying causes.

Article Abstract

The etiology of new-onset refractory status epilepticus (NORSE), including its subtype with prior fever known as FIRES (febrile infection-related epilepsy syndrome), remains uncertain. Several arguments suggest that NORSE is a disorder of immunity, likely post-infectious. Consequently, seasonal occurrence might be anticipated. Herein we investigated if seasonality is a notable factor regarding NORSE presentation. We combined four different data sets with a total of 342 cases, all from the northern hemisphere, and 62% adults. The incidence of NORSE cases differed between seasons (p = .0068) and was highest in the summer (32.2%) (p = .0022) and lowest in the spring (19.0%, p = .010). Although both FIRES and non-FIRES cases occurred most commonly during the summer, there was a trend toward FIRES cases being more likely to occur in the winter than non-FIRES cases (OR 1.62, p = .071). The seasonality of NORSE cases differed according to the etiology (p = .024). NORSE cases eventually associated with autoimmune/paraneoplastic encephalitis occurred most frequently in the summer (p = .032) and least frequently in the winter (p = .047), whereas there was no seasonality for cryptogenic cases. This study suggests that NORSE overall and NORSE related to autoimmune/paraneoplastic encephalitis are more common in the summer, but that there is no definite seasonality in cryptogenic cases.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/epi.17606DOI Listing

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