COVID-19 u pacjentów z epilepsją: Charakterystyka kliniczna i wyniki leczenia w dużej grupie pacjentów z jednego ośrodka

PubMed➕ 08.05.2026Epilepsy Res

COVID-19 among patients with epilepsy: Clinical characteristics and outcomes in a large single-center cohort

W skrócie

Badanie wykazało, że COVID-19 u osób z epilepsją przebiega zwykle łagodnie - prawie jedna trzecia zakażeń nie wywoływała żadnych objawów, a tylko 7% pacjentów wymagało hospitalizacji. Napady padaczkowe podczas zakażenia koronawirusem wystąpiły u około 16% pacjentów, ale u zaledwie 4% doszło do rzeczywistego pogorszenia częstości napadów. Badacze konkludują, że COVID-19 zwykle nie zagraża kontroli epilepsji i pacjentów można uspokajać, choć osoby ze skomplikowanym przebiegiem epilepsji wymagają bliższej obserwacji.

Oryginalny abstract (angielski)

AIM OF THE STUDY: To assess the prevalence and clinical course of COVID-19 in adults with epilepsy, CLINICAL RATIONALE FOR THE STUDY: People with epilepsy (PWE) have been considered a potentially vulnerable population during the COVID-19 pandemic, yet data on infection risk, disease severity, and seizure exacerbation remain inconsistent. Clarifying these relationships is essential for patient counseling and risk stratification in clinical practice. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We conducted a retrospective observational study of 407 adult patients treated at a tertiary epilepsy center. Demographic and epilepsy characteristics, comorbidities, COVID-19 infection history, vaccination status, symptom profile, and seizure occurrence during infection, were analyzed. Comparisons were performed between patients with and without prior COVID-19. RESULTS: A history of COVID-19 was reported by 138 patients (33.9%). Nearly one third of infections were asymptomatic, and only 7.4% required hospitalization. Fever, fatigue, and cough were the most common symptoms. Seizures during infection occurred in 15.7% of patients, but only 4.1% experienced a clinically meaningful increase in seizure frequency. COVID-19 was more frequent in women and in patients in remission. CONCLUSIONS: COVID-19 in PWE is usually mild and rarely associated with seizure worsening. These findings support reassuring patients that SARS-CoV-2 infection is unlikely to destabilize seizure control, while emphasizing focused vigilance in clinically complex individuals.

Metadane publikacji

Journal
Epilepsy Res
Data publikacji
04.05.2026
PMID
42097007
DOI
10.1016/j.eplepsyres.2026.107813
Autorzy
Pawlicka A, Wężyk K, Słowik A, Bosak K, Bosak M
Słowa kluczowe
COVID-19, Clinical course, Epilepsy, SARS-CoV-2, Seizure exacerbation
Źródło
PubMed