Заявление о конфликте интересов/Conflict of Interest StatementСтатья выпущена при финансовой поддержке компании Eisai. Авторы несут полную ответственность за содержание статьи и редакционные решения. Конфликт интересов не повлиял на результаты исследования.The paper has been published with financial support from Eisai. The authors are solely responsible for the content of the article and for editorial decisions. The conflict of interest has not affected the results of the investigation.
In symptomatic epilepsy with early onset, gender differences in family and educational status were not identified. Regardless of gender, patients with myoclonus had higher education more frequently than patients with absence and tonic-clonic seizures. Patients with the combination of different types of seizures, irrespective from etiology and gender, had secondary education more frequently. Women with rare generalized seizures more frequently had higher education and were married. Unmarried men with rare generalized seizures lived separately from their relatives more frequently. To author's opinion, the contradiction in indicators of social adaptation in men with rare generalized seizures, to the great extent, is related to the phenomenon of self-stigmatization than to the influence of disease. The results can be used in rehabilitation of patients with idiopathic epilepsy syndromes.
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