Neonatal seizures: eyes open or closed?

Standard

Neonatal seizures: eyes open or closed? / Bauder, Florian; Wohlrab, Gabriele; Schmitt, Bernhard.

In: EPILEPSIA, Vol. 48, No. 2, 2, 2007, p. 394-396.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Bauder, F, Wohlrab, G & Schmitt, B 2007, 'Neonatal seizures: eyes open or closed?', EPILEPSIA, vol. 48, no. 2, 2, pp. 394-396. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17295637?dopt=Citation>

APA

Bauder, F., Wohlrab, G., & Schmitt, B. (2007). Neonatal seizures: eyes open or closed? EPILEPSIA, 48(2), 394-396. [2]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17295637?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Bauder F, Wohlrab G, Schmitt B. Neonatal seizures: eyes open or closed? EPILEPSIA. 2007;48(2):394-396. 2.

Bibtex

@article{51cf273073204977ba8f73447f96aeee,
title = "Neonatal seizures: eyes open or closed?",
abstract = "PURPOSE: It has been shown that persistent eye closure during paroxysmal events in infants makes seizures unlikely. Our study aims to assess whether this is also true in neonates. METHODS: We reviewed and classified all archived neonatal seizures in our video database, considering electroclinical seizures only and excluding electrographic seizures and clinical seizures without ictal change in EEG. We assessed whether eyes were open during the seizure. One hundred and thirty-one electroclinical seizures (clonic, focal and generalized tonic, tonic-clonic, generalized myoclonic, subtle and spasms) in 46 neonates were included. RESULTS: In 115 (88%) seizures, eyes were open; in 10 seizures, they were closed; and in six seizures, eye opening could not be evaluated. All 10 seizures with persistent eye closure were clonic seizures. CONCLUSIONS: Our data demonstrate that persistent eye closure during an event suggestive of a seizure in a newborn makes an electroclinical seizure unlikely.",
author = "Florian Bauder and Gabriele Wohlrab and Bernhard Schmitt",
year = "2007",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "48",
pages = "394--396",
journal = "EPILEPSIA",
issn = "0013-9580",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Neonatal seizures: eyes open or closed?

AU - Bauder, Florian

AU - Wohlrab, Gabriele

AU - Schmitt, Bernhard

PY - 2007

Y1 - 2007

N2 - PURPOSE: It has been shown that persistent eye closure during paroxysmal events in infants makes seizures unlikely. Our study aims to assess whether this is also true in neonates. METHODS: We reviewed and classified all archived neonatal seizures in our video database, considering electroclinical seizures only and excluding electrographic seizures and clinical seizures without ictal change in EEG. We assessed whether eyes were open during the seizure. One hundred and thirty-one electroclinical seizures (clonic, focal and generalized tonic, tonic-clonic, generalized myoclonic, subtle and spasms) in 46 neonates were included. RESULTS: In 115 (88%) seizures, eyes were open; in 10 seizures, they were closed; and in six seizures, eye opening could not be evaluated. All 10 seizures with persistent eye closure were clonic seizures. CONCLUSIONS: Our data demonstrate that persistent eye closure during an event suggestive of a seizure in a newborn makes an electroclinical seizure unlikely.

AB - PURPOSE: It has been shown that persistent eye closure during paroxysmal events in infants makes seizures unlikely. Our study aims to assess whether this is also true in neonates. METHODS: We reviewed and classified all archived neonatal seizures in our video database, considering electroclinical seizures only and excluding electrographic seizures and clinical seizures without ictal change in EEG. We assessed whether eyes were open during the seizure. One hundred and thirty-one electroclinical seizures (clonic, focal and generalized tonic, tonic-clonic, generalized myoclonic, subtle and spasms) in 46 neonates were included. RESULTS: In 115 (88%) seizures, eyes were open; in 10 seizures, they were closed; and in six seizures, eye opening could not be evaluated. All 10 seizures with persistent eye closure were clonic seizures. CONCLUSIONS: Our data demonstrate that persistent eye closure during an event suggestive of a seizure in a newborn makes an electroclinical seizure unlikely.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 48

SP - 394

EP - 396

JO - EPILEPSIA

JF - EPILEPSIA

SN - 0013-9580

IS - 2

M1 - 2

ER -