Abstract

Sudden unexpected death in human epileptic patients (SUDEP) is defined as death related to recurrent unprovoked seizures, death occurring unexpectedly, and suddenly in a patient with reasonable state of health, without an obvious medical cause of death, trauma, asphyxia, or intractable status epilepticus, and in post mortem examination no obvious reason for death can be found. “Probable SUDEP” (pSUDEP) is defined as SUDEP not confirmed pathologically. The adapted abbreviation for dogs is used in the following: “pSUDED” (probable sudden unexpected death in dogs with epilepsy). The aim of the present monocentric retrospective study using an online questionnaire was to evaluate the occurrence of pSUDED. Data of canine patients presented with seizures between 01/1998 and 05/2018 were retrospectively analyzed and classified according to their etiology (n = 1,503). Owners were contacted by telephone to participate in answering a validated questionnaire. A total of 509 owners were reached, and 373 owners completed the questionnaire. In addition to signalement (e.g., breed), special attention was paid to the frequency and presentation of seizures and seizures in the context of death. Fifty-one percent (191/373) of the dogs were dead at the endpoint of the study. A large proportion of the dogs was euthanized (149/191) because of seizure severity or health problems unrelated to seizures. Idiopathic epilepsy (IE) was diagnosed in 19/34 dogs which died unexpectedly. Of these seven animals had to be excluded for further investigation of pSUDED because of status epilepticus or aspiration pneumonia as a result of the seizures. In 12 dogs with IE the last seizure event occurred between 6 h and ~3 months before death. pSUDED was suspected in these dogs and an occurrence rate of 4.5–10% was calculated. pSUDED appears in a similar occurrence rate as human SUDEP and should be considered as a possible complication in epileptic dogs. The results of this study suggest that dogs with IE but especially those with brachycephalic syndrome and cluster seizures have an increased risk to die of pSUDED. Owners of dogs with seizures should be educated about the risk of sudden death in dogs with epilepsy.

Highlights

  • There is a 1.6–3-fold increase in standardized mortality rate (SMR) in human patients with epilepsy compared to the general population [1]

  • “Definite Sudden unexpected death in human epileptic patients (SUDEP)” is defined in human medicine as “sudden unexpected, witnessed or unwitnessed, non-traumatic death occurring in benign circumstances in an individual with epilepsy with or without evidence for a preceding seizure and excluding a documented status epilepticus

  • Further inclusion criteria were at least one general and one neurological examination and available results of blood tests for further analysis, as well as urine test if available. According to their diagnosis the cases were divided into Probable Sudden Unexpected Death in Epileptic Dogs (pSUDED) study population and into the control group

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Summary

Introduction

There is a 1.6–3-fold increase in standardized mortality rate (SMR) in human patients with epilepsy compared to the general population [1]. The risk for sudden unexpected death in epilepsy patients (SUDEP) was estimated to be 7–12% up to 17% of all deaths in patients suffering from epilepsy and occurs especially after generalized tonic-clonic seizures (GTCS) [2,3,4,5,6]. “Definite SUDEP” is defined in human medicine as “sudden unexpected, witnessed or unwitnessed, non-traumatic death occurring in benign circumstances in an individual with epilepsy with or without evidence for a preceding seizure and excluding a documented status epilepticus. A probable SUDEP (pSUDEP) lacks postmortem examination but complies with definite SUDEP: “unexpected death in a reasonable state of health, during normal activities and in benign circumstances and without a known structural cause of death” [9]. Hughes reports in his review that subtherapeutic AED levels are a risk factor for SUDEP [12]

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