Zakaria Ahmed Mohamed, Chunjiao Tang, Erick Thokerunga, Ali Omar Jimale, Jingyi Fan
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引用次数: 1
Abstract
Background: Febrile seizures (FS) frequently manifest in children below 5 years of age. Although the exact etiology is still unknown, genetic predisposition, changes in neurotransmitter levels, and serum electrolyte imbalance are some of the known risk factors. This study examined the possible association between serum magnesium levels in children with FS compared to febrile children without seizures.
Methods: A retrospective case-control study was conducted from February 2019 to January 2021, recruiting 230 age and gender-matched cases and controls (115 each). Extracted data were analyzed using SPSS using an independent student's t-test, Chi-square test, and Pearson's correlation analysis.
Results: The mean serum magnesium levels were 0.93 ± 0.129 vs 0.97 ± 0.0961; p < 0.001, between cases and controls respectively. Similarly, hypomagnesemia (<0.85 mmol/L) was detected in 26.1% and 8.7% of the cases and controls, respectively; p < 0.001. A significant negative correlation was found between serum magnesium levels and the occurrence of febrile seizures; r = [-0.169], p < 0.05.
Conclusion: Serum magnesium was significantly low in febrile children with seizures compared to those without, and hypomagnesemia was associated with the occurrence of febrile seizures. These results portray hypomagnesemia as a possible risk factor for febrile seizure, and so should be validated in future large cohort studies so that guidelines are set for proper management of these children.
背景:发热性惊厥(FS)常见于5岁以下儿童。虽然确切的病因尚不清楚,但遗传易感性、神经递质水平的变化和血清电解质失衡是一些已知的危险因素。本研究探讨了与无癫痫发作的发热儿童相比,FS儿童血清镁水平之间可能存在的关联。方法:于2019年2月至2021年1月进行回顾性病例对照研究,招募230例年龄和性别匹配的病例和对照组(各115例)。提取的数据使用SPSS进行分析,采用独立学生t检验、卡方检验和Pearson相关分析。结果:两组患者血清镁水平分别为0.93±0.129 vs 0.97±0.0961;病例和对照组之间的P < 0.001。结论:有惊厥的发热儿童血清镁明显低于无惊厥儿童,且低镁血症与发热惊厥的发生有关。这些结果表明低镁血症可能是热性癫痫发作的危险因素,因此应该在未来的大型队列研究中得到验证,以便为这些儿童的适当管理制定指南。
期刊介绍:
AIMS Neuroscience is an international Open Access journal devoted to publishing peer-reviewed, high quality, original papers from all areas in the field of neuroscience. The primary focus is to provide a forum in which to expedite the speed with which theoretical neuroscience progresses toward generating testable hypotheses. In the presence of current and developing technology that offers unprecedented access to functions of the nervous system at all levels, the journal is designed to serve the role of providing the widest variety of the best theoretical views leading to suggested studies. Single blind peer review is provided for all articles and commentaries.