Mobile phones and seizures: drug-resistant epilepsy is less common in mobile-phone-using patients
Autor: | Veeramma Uppala, Harish Lavu, Hima Bindu Bolla, Sundarachary Nagarjunakonda, Srinivasulu Athina, Rama Krishna Gajula, Rajeswari Daggumati, Ramya Sree Tata, Lalitha Rajanala, Anil Kumar Devanaboina, Sridhar Amalakanti |
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Rok vydání: | 2016 |
Předmět: |
0301 basic medicine
Adult Male medicine.medical_specialty Pediatrics Drug Resistant Epilepsy Neurology Adolescent India Cohort Studies 03 medical and health sciences Epilepsy Young Adult 0302 clinical medicine Mobile phone radiation and health medicine Outpatient clinic Humans Psychiatry Aged Retrospective Studies business.industry Retrospective cohort study General Medicine Middle Aged medicine.disease 030104 developmental biology Mobile phone Case-Control Studies Anticonvulsants Female business 030217 neurology & neurosurgery Cell Phone Cohort study |
Zdroj: | Postgraduate medical journal. 93(1095) |
ISSN: | 1469-0756 |
Popis: | Background Epilepsy is a condition where patients have seizures due to abnormal nerve impulses in the brain. The effect of mobile phone radiation on patients with seizures is not known. Objective To compare the seizure profile of patients not using mobile phones with that of their peers using mobile phones. Methods In a retrospective cohort study performed at the neurology outpatient department of Guntur Medical College Hospital, Guntur, India from September 2014 to September 2015, we included 178 consecutive epileptic patients aged 16–65 years, who had had seizure disorder for 1 year or more. On the basis of their possession and usage of mobile phones, patients were divided into three groups: no mobile group (NMG), home mobile group (HMG) and personal mobile group (PMG). We obtained data on seizure frequency and recorded details of mobile phone usage and their antiepileptic drug (AED) treatment. Results 107 NMG, 3 HMG and 68 PMG patients were finalised for the analysis. There was no significant difference in the number of seizures in the past year between the three groups. The PMG (3.7%) contained a clinically significant lower proportion of patients with drug-resistant epilepsy than the NMG (28.2%). Patients with drug-responsive epilepsy were 7.4 (95% CI 1.4 to 39.9) (p=0.01) times more likely to be found in the PMG than in the NMG after adjustment for differences in sex and occupation. Conclusions Although the experimental data remain inconclusive, our clinical study suggests that patients who use mobile phones are less likely to have drug-resistant epilepsy. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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