Epilepsy is the most common chronic neurological condition in children. Many barriers exist in early recognition which cause delay in care and impact quality of life. Some of these children require advanced treatments which are underutilized due to lack of education, awareness and referrals. Overall, childhood epilepsy is underdiagnosed and poorly understood by non-expert providers. We investigated awareness and knowledge about epilepsy from primary care providers via the quality of their referrals. We prospectively collected and examined all epilepsy related referrals to the Paediatric Neurology Division at Children's Hospital in London, Ontario, Canada during a six-month period. We developed a modified "epilepsy focused" scoring tool to evaluate the referrals and scored them as basic or advanced. During the study time frame 175 (82 %) referrals met the inclusion criteria. Out of these, 152 (87 %) were identified as basic and 23 (13 %) were advanced (p < 0.001). Amongst the referrals that scored basic vs advanced: Family Doctors n = 49 with 40 basic (81 %) vs 9 advanced (18.3 %), Paediatric ER physicians n = 37, all 37 were basic (100 %) and Paediatricians n = 41 with 36 (87 %) basic and 5 (12 %) advanced. Our results showed significant lack of critical information in the content of epilepsy referrals coming from non-epileptologist providers, largely from the cohort of paediatric ED doctors. This reveals that knowledge and awareness of epilepsy in children remains scarce. Identifying these barriers can provide insights to develop strategies to facilitate accurate identification and rapid triage for children presenting with new onset epilepsy.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11729034PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ebr.2024.100733DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

epilepsy
5
referrals
5
heterogeneous knowledge
4
knowledge childhood
4
childhood seizures
4
seizures epilepsy
4
epilepsy care
4
care canadian
4
canadian healthcare
4
healthcare providers
4

Similar Publications

Patients suffering epilepsy caused by the gain-of-function mutants of the hKCNT1 potassium channels are drug refractory. In this study, we cloned a novel human KCNT1B channel isoform using the brain cDNA library and conducted patch-clamp and molecular docking analyses to characterize the pharmacological properties of the hKCNT1B channel using thirteen drugs. Among cinchona alkaloids, we found that hydroquinine exerted the strongest blocking effect on the hKCNT1B channel, especially the F313L mutant.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Postseizure brain changes on imaging are well-known facts. Many times, oedematous brain changes can mimic ischaemic stroke. Crossed cerebellar diaschisis refers to a depression in metabolism, affecting the cerebellar hemisphere due to contralateral supratentorial abnormalities.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Our previous in silico data indicated an overrepresentation of the ZF5 motif in the promoters of genes in which circadian oscillations are altered in the ventral hippocampus in the pilocarpine model of temporal lobe epilepsy in mice. In this study, we test the hypothesis that the Zbtb14 protein oscillates in the hippocampus in a diurnal manner and that this oscillation is disrupted by epilepsy. We found that Zbtb14 immunostaining is present in the cytoplasm and cell nuclei.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective Infantile Spasms (IS) are an age-specific epilepsy syndrome associated with poor outcome. Sustained and early spasm-control remains the main goal of therapy. We aimed to evaluate a unique pulsatile dexamethasone therapy regime in children with IS, applying a prolonged first pulse in cases of insufficient spasm-control.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A multi-domain feature fusion epilepsy seizure detection method based on spike matching and PLV functional networks.

J Neural Eng

January 2025

Hangzhou Dianzi University, School of Automation, Hangzhou Dianzi University, Hangzhou 310052, China, Hangzhou, Zhejiang, 310018, CHINA.

The identification of spikes, as a typical characteristic wave of epilepsy, is crucial for diagnosing and locating the epileptogenic region. The traditional seizure detection methods lack spike features and have low sample richness. This paper proposes a seizure detection method with spike-based phase locking value (PLV) functional brain networks and multi-domain fused features.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!