Introduction. Alcohol withdrawal syndrome (AWS) can occur in about half of patients with alcohol use disorder who abruptly reduce or cease consumption of this substance. Epileptic seizures are one of the possible manifestations. Objective. Evaluate epidemiological data, clinical characteristics, length of hospital stay and recurrence of emergency medical care between patients with alcohol withdrawal-related epileptic seizures. Method. This is a retrospective observational study, with data collection from medical records of patients treated for epileptic seizures caused by AWS in a public hospital in Minas Gerais within a year. Inferential statistical association between nominal variables was assessed by cross-tabulation with the chi-square test. Results. 45 patients were included in the study. The most prevalent age group was 35 to 45 years (37.7%). In 46.6%, it was described a previous diagnosis of epilepsy. There was an association between the previous diagnosis of epilepsy and the presence of epileptic seizures (p<0.001). The type of seizure was generalized tonic-clonic since the onset in 92% of cases. 78% had seizures up to 48 hours after the last alcohol consumption. The rate of recurrence at the emergency department during the year was 31%. Conclusion. AWS-related epileptic seizures predominantly affect young men and are associated with a high recurrence rate of need of emergency hospital care, being a complex public health problem. These data point to the need to strengthen strategies for primary prevention.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.