作者
Chao Zhang,Xiu Wang,Yao Wang,Jianguo Zhang,Wenhan Hu,Ming Ge,Kai Zhang,Xiaoqiu Shao
摘要
To perform a systematic review and meta-analysis to identify risk factors associated with early seizure (ES) or late seizure (LS) onset in adults following stroke.Electronic databases (MEDLINE and EMBASE), archives of stroke or epilepsy patients, and bibliographies of relevant articles, which were written in English.We included studies published since 1990 that reported the stroke and seizure outcomes of adult patients during follow-up. We independently performed title, abstract and full-text screening and resolved disagreements through discussion.Two authors performed the data extraction. We recorded all possible risk factors predictive of seizure onset.We used odds ratios (ORs) or the mean difference (MD) to compare the pooled rates of seizure onset between the exposed group and the non-exposed group. All meta-analyses were performed with Review Manager Software.Intracerebral hemorrhage (OR=1.88, 95% CI=1.43-2.47), cerebral infarction with hemorrhagic transformation (OR=3.28, 95% CI=2.09-5.16), stroke severity (OR=3.10, 95% CI=2.00-4.81, p<0.01, I(2)=0%; MD=3.98, 95% CI=1.06-6.90, p<0.01), and alcoholism (OR=1.70, 95% CI=1.23-2.34, p<0.01) were associated with a significantly greater probability of ES occurrence. There were significant effects of cortical involvement (OR=2.50, 95% CI=1.93-3.23) and stroke severity (MD=5.72, 95% CI=4.23-7.22, p<0.01, I(2)=0) on LS onset. However, there was no significant difference in the probability of single LS episode between patients with intracerebral hemorrhage and infarction stroke (OR=1.20, 95% CI=0.92-1.55).Evidence suggests that cortical involvement, stroke subtypes and stroke severity are significant predictors of seizure onset following stroke. However, we did not find a significant difference in the rate of onset of single LS episodes between patients with intracerebral hemorrhage and cerebral infarction.