Epilepsy in a health district in North-West Cameroon: Clinical characteristics and treatment gap

Samuel A. Angwafor, Gail S. Bell, Leonard Ngarka, Willem M. Otte, Earnest N. Tabah, Leonard N. Nfor, Theophilus N. Njamnshi, Josemir W. Sander*, Alfred K. Njamnshi

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

2 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Introduction: Epilepsy is a common yet misunderstood condition in Cameroon, including in the Batibo Health district. Methods: This cross-sectional study describes epilepsy clinical characteristics, the treatment gap, and associated factors in a rural district in Cameroon. After screening for epilepsy using a door-to-door survey, physicians confirmed suspected cases of epilepsy. Detailed information on the medical, seizure, and treatment history was collected from everyone with epilepsy, followed by a general and neurological examination. Results: We diagnosed 546 people with active epilepsy (at least one seizure in the previous 12 months). The mean age of people with active epilepsy was 25.2 years (SD: 11.1). The mean age at first seizure was 12.5 years (SD: 8.2). Convulsive seizures (uncertain whether generalized or focal) were the most common seizure types (60%), while 41% had focal-onset seizures. About 60% of people had seizures at least monthly. One-quarter of participants had had at least one episode of status epilepticus. Anti-seizure medication (ASM) was taken by 85%, but most were receiving inappropriate treatment or were non-adherent, hence the high treatment gap (80%). Almost a third had had seizure-related injuries. Epilepsy was responsible for low school attendance; 74% of school dropouts were because of epilepsy. Conclusion: The high proportion of focal-onset seizures suggests acquired causes (such as neurocysticercosis and onchocerciasis, both endemic in this area). The high epilepsy treatment gap and the high rates of status epilepticus and epilepsy-related injuries underscore the high burden of epilepsy in this rural Cameroonian health district.

Original languageEnglish
Article number107997
JournalEpilepsy and Behavior
Volume121
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Aug 2021

Keywords

  • Batibo
  • Convulsions
  • Cysticercosis
  • Injury
  • Onchocerciasis
  • Treatment

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