Affiliations: Neurology Unit, Department of Pediatrics, University
of Nigeria Teaching Hospital, Enugu, Nigeria
Note: [] Correspondence: Dr. Roland C. Ibekwe, Neurology Unit, Department
Of Pediatrics, University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital, Enugu, Nigeria. Tel.:
+234 8037875631; E-mail: roland_ibekwe@ yahoo.com
Abstract: Cerebral palsy (CP) and epilepsy are the two most common chronic
neurological diseases encountered by pediatric neurologists in Nigeria. Though
epilepsy is commonly encountered among children with CP, there are very few
studies on the prevalence of epilepsy among Nigerian children with CP and
factors that are associated with this. This study was undertaken to determine
the prevalence of epilepsy among children with CP and elucidate the factors
that influences this. It was a retrospective analysis of the case files of
consecutive children that presented at the pediatric neurology unit of
university of Nigeria teaching hospital, Enugu with a diagnosis of CP from 1st
January 2007 to 31st December 2009. CP occurred in 20.8% of the children that
presented at the pediatric neurology clinic. Spastic quadriplegic CP (55.5%)
was the predominant type of CP encountered and the common causes were severe
birth asphyxia (48.2%) and neonatal jaundice (20.1%). Epilepsy was observed in
37.8% of the children with CP. The common types of epileptic seizures observed
were generalized tonic clonic seizures (38.7%), complex partial seizures
(19.4%) and mixed epilepsy (19.4%). Infantile spasms and mixed epilepsy were
observed predominantly among children with quadriplegic CP while those with
hemiplegic CP almost exclusively presented with partial seizures (P = 0.01). We
conclude that epilepsy is common among children with CP and severe seizure
types like infantile spasm and mixed epilepsies are more common among
quadriplegic CP.