Kaputu-Kalala-Malu Célestin
Service of Child Neurology, Department of Neurology, Kinshasa School of Medicine, University of Kinshasa, Republic Democratic of Congo.
Pan Afr Med J. 2016 Feb 29;23:58. doi: 10.11604/pamj.2016.23.58.3273. eCollection 2016.
Epilepsy is a neurological disease common among children in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Although its exact prevalence in this population is unknown, it is probably similar to that found in the general population because of its early onset (60% starts before the age of 20 years) and the absence of bimodal distribution found in western countries. This review acknowledges the reality that current management of pediatric epilepsy in SSA is imperfect. To reverse this trend, the challenges are three fold: better education, improved therapeutics and more research. Doctors need to be trained in the practice of pediatric neurology and provided with working conditions that limit the brain drain. The resources necessary for the proper management of children with epilepsy in SSA need to be identified and provided (better availability of antiepileptic drugs, clear national guidelines, proper registration of traditional healers etc…). Finally, it is imperative that research be conducted to establish accurate incidence and prevalence figures for pediatric epilepsy, so that targeted control measures can be implemented.
癫痫是撒哈拉以南非洲地区(SSA)儿童中常见的一种神经系统疾病。尽管该人群中癫痫的确切患病率尚不清楚,但由于其发病较早(60%在20岁之前发病)且不存在西方国家发现的双峰分布,其患病率可能与普通人群相似。本综述承认SSA地区目前对小儿癫痫的管理并不完善这一现实。为扭转这一趋势,面临三方面挑战:更好的教育、改进的治疗方法和更多的研究。医生需要接受小儿神经病学实践培训,并提供限制人才外流的工作条件。需要确定并提供SSA地区妥善管理癫痫儿童所需的资源(更好地提供抗癫痫药物、明确的国家指南、对传统治疗师进行适当登记等)。最后,必须开展研究以确定小儿癫痫的准确发病率和患病率数据,以便实施有针对性的控制措施。