Abstract

Educational delay was assessed in a group of children with epilepsy and co-morbid learning problems, and compared with a matched group of children with learning problems, but without epilepsy. In addition, delay in the academic skills reading/spelling and arithmetic was compared for the two groups. Moreover, the differential contribution for the development of learning problems of each of the following epileptic factors was inspected: type of epilepsy, seizure type, seizure frequency and type of AED-treatment. The ‘Groninger School Onderzoek’ (G.S.O.) was used to yield an objective measurement of school achievement. The first 24 children with a reconfirmed diagnosis of epilepsy and with co-morbid learning problems who were referred to our outpatient department for ‘epilepsy and learning disabilities’ were included in the study. Each child was matched to a control subject (children with learning problems, but without epilepsy). Matching was carried out for the potential confounding factors age, school-type, school-grade and intelligence. The measure for school achievement showed no significant differences between the two groups with a delay in both groups of approximately a half year. Also, no statistically significant difference was found with respect to achievement on the academic skills reading/spelling and arithmetic. The impact of several epileptic factors on the measurement of school achievement were analyzed. The analysis of type of epilepsy showed significant lower school achievement scores for the patients with idiopathic generalized epilepsy compared to the patients with localisation-related epilepsy. Further evaluation of this result shows that most of the patients, classified as idiopathic generalized epilepsy have a recent onset epilepsy, a high seizure frequency and are not yet satisfactorily controlled with antiepileptic therapy. The key factor contributing to learning problems in children with epilepsy is an ‘uncontrolled’ epilepsy, i.e., an epilepsy with high seizure frequency.

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