• J Natl Med Assoc · Apr 2005

    Pattern of emergency neurologic morbidities in children.

    • Gabriel E Ofovwe, Michael O Ibadin, Peter O Okunola, and Bibian Ofoegbu.
    • Department of Child Health, University of Benin Teaching Hospital, Benin City, Nigeria. ofovwe@uniben.edu
    • J Natl Med Assoc. 2005 Apr 1; 97 (4): 488-92.

    AbstractNeurologic morbidities seen in the children's emergency facility of the University of Benin Teaching Hospital, Nigeria, over a five-year period (July 1996-June 2001) was evaluated to determine the pattern and outcome. Notes and ward records of patients with neurologic morbidities were retrieved. Data obtained from these sources include age, sex principal diagnosis, duration of stay and outcome. Six-hundred-four out of 3,868 patients (15.6%) had neurologic morbidity. Children five years of age and under were 466 (77.2%), and modal age group was 1-2 years. Febrile convulsion was the most common neurologic morbidity seen (35.1%) followed by cerebral malaria (28.0%) and then meningitis (27.0%). An increased incidence of cases occurred during the rainy season. Sixty-four out of 406 with complete records (15.8%) died. Forty-seven (67.2%) died within 24 hours of admission. Cerebral malaria and meningitis accounted for all the deaths. Preventable infectious diseases are the major causes of emergency neurologic morbidities and mortality. The majority die within 24 hours largely due to a delay in presentation to the hospital. Effective malaria control and prevention of meningitis would reduce the incidence of neurologic morbidities and, if this is coupled with health education of the populace on the importance of attending health facility early, mortality from these causes would be greatly reduced.

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