Abstract

An epidemiologic survey began on March 1, 1984, and ended on February 28, 1985. During this period, all neurologists and electroencephalographers of the department of Gironde, an administrative district of the French Southwest (1,128,164 residents in 1982) obtained information by questionnaire from all persons who had experienced an epileptic seizure for the first time in their lives. Recurrent, isolated, and situation-related seizures were included. Febrile convulsions and neonatal seizures were excluded. The global incidence rate of diagnosed epileptic seizures was 71.3/100,000. The incidence rates per year and per 100,000 persons by type of epileptic syndrome were 1.7 for idiopathic and 13.6 for symptomatic localization-related epilepsies, 5.6 for idiopathic and 1.1 for symptomatic generalized epilepsies, 1.9 for undermined epilepsies, 29.0 for situation-related seizures, 18.3 for isolated seizures, and 0.3 for television epilepsies. Other epileptic syndromes were not represented. Using a classification of epileptic syndromes and not of epileptic seizures reduces difficulties in an epidemiologic survey. Diagnosis of an epileptic syndrome is time dependent, however, and at follow-up some patients shift from one group to another.

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