ObjectiveTo systematically evaluate the efficacy of steroids combined with antiepileptic drugs compared with alone antiepileptic drugs in the treatment of children with epileptic electrical status during sleep to provide evidence-based medical basis for its treatment.MethodsElectronic searches were maded in PubMed, Embase database, Cochrane Library, CNKI, Wanfang and the Chinese biomedical literature database for the literature about steroids combined with antiepileptic drugs compared with alone antiepileptic drugs in the treatment, and retrieval time is from January 1990 to October 2020. Two evaluators independently screened literature, extracted data, evaluated literature quality and risk of bias and checked each other. Meta analysis was performed by stata16.0 software.ResultsA total of 679 children with ESES were included in 10 studies, including 9 randomized controlled trials and 1 retrospective cohort study. Meta analysis results showed that there were statistically significant differences in clinical improvement rate [RR=1.31, 95%CI (1.21, 1.42), P<0.01], electroencephalogram discharge improvement rate [RR=1.35, 95%CI (1.25, 1.46), P<0.01] and cognitive intelligence score [SMD=1.19, 95%CI (0.80, 1.57), P<0.01] between steroids combined with antiepileptic drugs group and alone antiepileptic drugs group after 6 months follow-up. The incidence of adverse reactions in steroids combined with antiepileptic drugs group was higher than that in alone antiepileptic drugs group, and the difference was statistically significant [RR=4.13, 95%CI (1.06, 16.13), P<0.01]. All adverse reactions improved or disappeared after drug withdrawal.ConclusionCompared with alone antiepileptic drugs, steroids combined with antiepileptic drugs group has advantages in controlling epileptic seizures, improving electroencephalogram abnormalities and improving cognitive ability, and it is relatively safe.
ObjectiveTo investigate the effect of high-dose hormone pulse therapy on children with epilepsy and sleep status epilepticus.Methods60 children were randomly divided into control group (30 cases) and study group (30 cases) according to the admission sequence. The control group was treated with antiepileptic drugs (according to clinical electroencephalogram or syndrome), and the study group was treated with methylprednisolone sodium succinate [20 mg/(kg·d) × 3 days, once a month, for 6 months]. During the period, antiepileptic drugs were taken normally. After 6 months, the curative effect, abnormal EEG and side effects were compared.ResultsAfter 6 months of treatment, the clinical conditions of the two groups were significantly improved (effective rate: control group: 19/30 vs. study group: 26/30), and the clinical efficacy (26/30) and EEG improvement (26/30) of the study group were better than those of the control group (P<0.05), weight gain can be improved by diet control and reasonable exercise.ConclusionHormone pulse therapy for children with epilepsy and sleep status epilepticus in the control of clinical seizures and improve the effect of abnormal EEG, recommended.