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Vitamins and Minerals Vs Ketogenic Diet in Management of Refractory Epilepsy?

مؤلف البحث
Emad El-Deen Mahmoud Hammad EL Daly, Osama Mahmoud EL Asheer, Eman Fathala Gad, Nancy Alaa Elgalaly, Duaa Mohammad Raafat, Noha ElGyar
تاريخ البحث
قسم البحث
مجلة البحث
Journal of Chemical Health Risks (JCHR)
المشارك في البحث
عدد البحث
Vol. 14 No. 5
موقع البحث
https://www.jchr.org/index.php/JCHR/article/view/6569
سنة البحث
2024
صفحات البحث
1893-1901
ملخص البحث

Abstract

Introduction: Epilepsy, a chronic disorder with recurrent seizures, is challenging to manage, especially in cases resistant to standard antiepileptic drugs (AEDs).

 

Aim of the study: We aimed to determine which is better in management of refractory epilepsy in pediatrics  (mixed steroid and ketogenic diet   or multivitamins )

 

Methods: It is a randomized, single-blinded study at Assiut University Children Hospital, Egypt (October 2020–October 2021), 70 patients aged 1-17 with refractory epilepsy were assigned to two treatment groups: Group 1 received multivitamins (zinc, copper, magnesium, vitamins A, C, D, selenium, calcium), and Group 2 received corticosteroids followed by a ketogenic diet. Both groups continued their standard AED regimen. Changes in seizure frequency, metabolic parameters, radiological findings, and overall improvement were assessed.

 

Results: No significant differences in demographic and neurological assessments, laboratory and radiological findings were noted. Generalized seizures were more common. The vitamin group had the highest overall improvement, though convulsion frequency changes but had insignificant difference from another group.

 

Conclusion: Both treatments showed limited impact on convulsion frequency