Ketogenic Diet Versus Immunological Therapy in the Management of Refractory Epilepsy in Children
Osama M Elasheer, Emad H Eldaly, Eman F Gad, Nancy A Elgalaly, Duaa M Raafat, Noha ElGyar

TL;DR
This study compares the ketogenic diet and rituximab for managing epilepsy in children unresponsive to standard drugs.
Contribution
The study evaluates the efficacy of rituximab and ketogenic diet in refractory epilepsy compared to steroids.
Findings
Rituximab showed the highest fit reduction (42.9%) compared to ketogenic diet (30%) and steroids (21%).
Positive family history of epilepsy significantly influenced treatment outcomes across all groups.
Ketogenic diet was most effective in patients with multiple seizure types or consanguinity.
Abstract
Background: In neuroclinical practice, refractory epilepsy can be identified only after the failure of several antiepileptic drugs (AEDs), so newer lines of treatment have been used, such as the ketogenic diet and rituximab. Methods: A total of 105 patients with refractory epilepsy were divided into three equal groups, each receiving a specific treatment: group R received rituximab, group K received a ketogenic diet, and group S received steroids for six months. Seizure frequency was recorded before and after enrollment. Results: The age to start AEDs, the age at enrollment in the study, and the duration of use of AEDs were comparable among the three groups. Family history was the highest in rituximab and consanguinity was the highest in steroid but without significant statistical difference with p value 0.829 and 0.941 respectively. There was a significant improvement (in the form of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDiet and metabolism studies · Epilepsy research and treatment · Gastrointestinal motility and disorders
