Sudden epilepsy deaths and the forensic pathologist: Difference between revisions

From SUDEP Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Ycarmen1 (talk | contribs)
Created page with "''Leestma JE, Hughes JR, Teas SS, and Kalelkar MB (1985) Sudden epilepsy deaths and the forensic pathologist. Am J Forensic Med Pathol 6:3 215–8.'' '''[https://www.ncbi.nlm..."
 
No edit summary
 
Line 1: Line 1:
''Leestma JE, Hughes JR, Teas SS, and Kalelkar MB (1985) Sudden epilepsy deaths and the forensic pathologist. Am J Forensic Med Pathol 6:3 215–8.''
{{Reference


'''[https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3870673 Link to Article]'''
|reference=


'''Abstract:''' Sudden unexpected deaths in epileptic persons are not rare events, most commonly encountered by the forensic pathologist rather than the clinician. Such deaths may represent 1-1.5% of all "natural" deaths certified by the medical examiner or coroner. The typical victim is a black male about 30 years of age who tends to abuse alcohol, with a history of generalized epilepsy for more than 1 year and likely for more than 10 years. There are a lack of obvious anatomic causes for the death at autopsy, but 60-70% of cases will have a lesion in the brain (most commonly old trauma) to explain the epilepsy. Most victims have no blood levels of anticonvulsant medications at the time of death. We have evolved a form for use by medical examiner/coroner's investigators at the scene to collect relevant information which will be of assistance to the pathologist in interpreting the case. Estimated prevalence of sudden epilepsy death, mechanisms, and other features of such cases are reviewed briefly.
Leestma JE, Hughes JR, Teas SS, and Kalelkar MB (1985) Sudden epilepsy deaths and the forensic pathologist. Am J Forensic Med Pathol 6:3 215–8.


=Context=
|url=
 
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3870673
 
|abstract=
 
Sudden unexpected deaths in epileptic persons are not rare events, most commonly encountered by the forensic pathologist rather than the clinician. Such deaths may represent 1-1.5% of all "natural" deaths certified by the medical examiner or coroner. The typical victim is a black male about 30 years of age who tends to abuse alcohol, with a history of generalized epilepsy for more than 1 year and likely for more than 10 years. There are a lack of obvious anatomic causes for the death at autopsy, but 60-70% of cases will have a lesion in the brain (most commonly old trauma) to explain the epilepsy. Most victims have no blood levels of anticonvulsant medications at the time of death. We have evolved a form for use by medical examiner/coroner's investigators at the scene to collect relevant information which will be of assistance to the pathologist in interpreting the case. Estimated prevalence of sudden epilepsy death, mechanisms, and other features of such cases are reviewed briefly.
 
|keywords=
 
 
|context=


*Highlighting the need for greater standardization across medical examiners and autopsies, the authors provide a form for medical examiners to use in reporting SUDEP. Article also touches on demographic profile of patients with epilepsy who die suddenly.
*Highlighting the need for greater standardization across medical examiners and autopsies, the authors provide a form for medical examiners to use in reporting SUDEP. Article also touches on demographic profile of patients with epilepsy who die suddenly.


=Comments=
|comments=
 
 
}}

Latest revision as of 18:00, 17 June 2019


Leestma JE, Hughes JR, Teas SS, and Kalelkar MB (1985) Sudden epilepsy deaths and the forensic pathologist. Am J Forensic Med Pathol 6:3 215–8.

Link to Article

Abstract: Sudden unexpected deaths in epileptic persons are not rare events, most commonly encountered by the forensic pathologist rather than the clinician. Such deaths may represent 1-1.5% of all "natural" deaths certified by the medical examiner or coroner. The typical victim is a black male about 30 years of age who tends to abuse alcohol, with a history of generalized epilepsy for more than 1 year and likely for more than 10 years. There are a lack of obvious anatomic causes for the death at autopsy, but 60-70% of cases will have a lesion in the brain (most commonly old trauma) to explain the epilepsy. Most victims have no blood levels of anticonvulsant medications at the time of death. We have evolved a form for use by medical examiner/coroner's investigators at the scene to collect relevant information which will be of assistance to the pathologist in interpreting the case. Estimated prevalence of sudden epilepsy death, mechanisms, and other features of such cases are reviewed briefly.

Keywords:

Context

  • Highlighting the need for greater standardization across medical examiners and autopsies, the authors provide a form for medical examiners to use in reporting SUDEP. Article also touches on demographic profile of patients with epilepsy who die suddenly.

Comments

Network Graph

Retrieving data for the network graph...