The effect of seizures on functional status of people with spastic forms of cerebral palsy
Pubblicato online: 02 giu 2015
Pagine: 91 - 102
Ricevuto: 05 dic 2014
Accettato: 29 mag 2015
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21307/joepi-2015-0031
Parole chiave
© 2015 Agata Michalska et al., published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Background
Cerebral palsy (CP) is the most common childhood motor impairment. Epilepsy affects approximately one third of patients with CP. It is characterized by earlier disclosure, it is more severe and shows greater resistance than that of the general epilepsy treatment, associated with necessity for polytherapy. Its presence can result in gradual loss of function, loss of posture in non-ambulant individuals with severe disabilities and cognitive impairment risk, behavioural disorders and reducing probability of walking.
Aim
The aim of the study was to evaluate the functioning of people with CP with and without epilepsy.
Material and Methods
The study included 210 patients with a diagnosis of CP, aged 0–18 years. The study was conducted among the patients using the physiotherapy services in centres in southern Poland. The study used the Paediatric Evaluation of Disability Inventory (PEDI) and the classification systems: GMFCS, MACS, and CFCS.
Results
There were significant differences with regards to social functioning (53.7/67.4; W = 179, p = 0.006) and support in the social functioning (65.4/89.9; W = 185.5, p = 0.007) in patients with diplegia. However, mobility (19.55/29.00; W = 392, p = 0.018) and the social functioning (36.95/44.1; W = 418.5, p = 0.042) were lower in epileptic patients with tetraplegia. In patients with hemiplegia, there were no significant differences, although each domain with epilepsy subgroup had a lower rating than the subgroup without epilepsy.
Conclusion
The presence of epilepsy is associated with lower levels of social function in patients with cerebral palsy; particularly, with regard to mobility and selfservice.
Assessment of epilepsy impact on the level of social functioning of people with CP (diplegia, tetraplegia, hemiplegia) is difficult because ambiguous relationship with mental retardation. The assessment should be undertaken separately for each group of spastic CP.