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Figure 1.

Remaining on medications was significantly associated with higher frequency of seizures per month compared to other groups (p = 0.00036).
Remaining on medications was significantly associated with higher frequency of seizures per month compared to other groups (p = 0.00036).

Figure 2.

Time to first seizure by weaning technique: Cox regression used to calculate p-values comparing the seizure free proportion for weaning method to the others with adjustment for years of seizures and frequency of seizures per month.
Time to first seizure by weaning technique: Cox regression used to calculate p-values comparing the seizure free proportion for weaning method to the others with adjustment for years of seizures and frequency of seizures per month.

Demographics

GenderMale 47 (49.5%)Female 48 (50.5%)
Type of epilepsyTemporal 49 (51.6%)Extra-temporal 46 (48.4%)
Length of stayMean 3.57 daysRange 3–16 days
AgeMean 43.3 yearsRange 21–85 years
Weaning strategyRemain on medicationsn = 6
Cutting dosesn = 12
Stop one by onen = 57
Abrupt cessationn = 20

Factors associated with time to first seizure: abrupt cessation of medications was used as a reference, this was compared to other withdrawal methods

Time to first seizureHazard ratio (95%CI)p-value
Years of seizures0.99 (0.98–1.01)0.42
Seizure frequency1.00 (0.99–1.00)0.38
Abrupt cessation1.0 (reference)
Cut doses1.67 (0.74–3.77)0.22
Stop one-by-one2.79 (1.53–5.09)0.00084
Remain on medications7.01 (2.46–20)0.00027
eISSN:
2300-0147
Langue:
Anglais
Périodicité:
2 fois par an
Sujets de la revue:
Medicine, Clinical Medicine, other, Neurology, Pharmacology, Toxicology, Pharmacy, Clinical Pharmacy