PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Tonic-clonic activity at subarachnoid hemorrhage onset: impact on complications and outcome.

  • Gian Marco De Marchis,
  • Deborah Pugin,
  • Hector Lantigua,
  • Christopher Zammit,
  • Prasanna Tadi,
  • J Michael Schmidt,
  • M Cristina Falo,
  • Sachin Agarwal,
  • Stephan A Mayer,
  • Jan Claassen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0071405
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 8
p. e71405

Abstract

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ObjectiveTonic-clonic activity (TCA) at onset complicates 3% to 21% of cases of subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). The impact of onset TCA on in-hospital complications, including seizures, remains unclear. One study associated onset TCA with poor clinical outcome at 6 weeks after SAH, but to our knowledge no other studies have confirmed this relationship. This study aims to assess the impact of onset TCA on in-hospital complications, poor functional outcome, mortality, and epilepsy at 3 months.MethodsAnalysis of a prospective study cohort of 1479 SAH patients admitted to Columbia University Medical Center between 1996 and 2012. TCA within 6 hours of hemorrhage onset was identified based on accounts of emergency care providers or family witnesses.ResultsTCA at onset was described in 170 patients (11%). Patients with onset TCA were younger (P = 0.002), presented more often with poor clinical grade (55% vs. 26%, PConclusionsOnset TCA is not a rare event as it complicates 11% of cases of SAH. New and clinically relevant findings are the association of onset TCA with in-hospital seizures, pneumonia and delayed cerebral ischemia. Despite the increased risk of in-hospital complications, onset TCA is not associated with disability, mortality, and epilepsy at 3 months.