Minneapolis [US]:According to a new study, 5 per cent of persons with focal epilepsy had a seizure while driving prior to being diagnosed with epilepsy. The findings published in the online issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. More than half of all epilepsy cases are caused by focal epilepsy. This type of epilepsy causes repeated seizures that affect one half of the brain.
"Seizures while driving pose substantial risks for those experiencing them and for others on the road," said study author Jacob Pellinen, MD, of the University of Colorado in Aurora and a member of the American Academy of Neurology. "While medication may make it possible for some people with epilepsy to safely drive, they must first be diagnosed. Our study sought to define how often seizures happen while driving before a diagnosis and then how long it takes before a person is diagnosed. Our results can then help inform how to diagnose people sooner, with a goal of lowering the number of prediagnosis seizures on the road."
For the study, researchers identified 447 people with focal epilepsy. Participants had an average age of 29 when they experienced their first seizure. Researchers looked at participants' medical records prior to their epilepsy diagnoses. They found 23 people, or 5 per cent of participants, experienced one or more seizures while driving, for a total of 32 seizures while driving prior to diagnosis.
Of the 23 people, seven people, or 30 per cent, had more than one seizure while driving prior to diagnosis. For six people, or 26 per cent, their seizure while driving was their first-ever seizure. The consequences of these seizures while driving included 19 motor vehicle accidents and 11 hospitalizations for injuries ranging from a tongue bite and a dislocated thumb to a near drowning.