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Pediatric Seizure and Status Epilepticus Management in the Emergency Setting
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University of Illinois College of Medicine Chicago, IL
Edward P. Sloan, MD, MPH Associate Professor & Research Development Director Dept of Emergency Medicine University of Illinois College of Medicine Chicago, IL
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Attending Physician Emergency Medicine
University of Illinois Hospital Our Lady of the Resurrection Medical Center
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Pediatric Seizures & SE Clinical Case
A 13 year old female presents with a frontal HA and prior migraines that are relieved with ibuprofen She had some AMS in the AM, with unusual motor activity (restless, thrashing on bed) She had no other systemic sx, recent illness, or head trauma She presented with normal vital signs and normal neurologic exam What should the emergency physician do? What is the expected outcome of this patient?
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Overview Global Objectives
Learn more about pediatric seizures Focus on peds sz etiologies Increase awareness of Rx options Enhance our ED management Improve patient care & outcomes Maximize MD & patient satisfaction
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Overview Session Objectives
Review main peds sz types, etiologies Briefly discuss Rx based on sz type Discuss relevant ED peds sz cases Summarize what Rx options exist Discuss rational treatment decisions
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Overview Pediatric Sz Epidemiology
Common EMS & ED problem Szs are up to 6% of EMS encounters Up to 1% of all ED visits are peds sz Peds febrile: 1 in 125 visits (0.8%) Peds afebrile: 1 in 500 visits (0.2%)
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Overview Pediatric Sz Epidemiology
2-5% have a febrile seizure 1% have an afebrile sz by age 14 Highest afebrile sz rate before age 3 % of children dvlp epilepsy SE most common before age 1
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Overview Pediatric SE Epidemiology
Mean age 3.2 yrs, median age 1 year 61% by age 3 Etiology age dependent 25% is febrile SE Before age 1, 75% due to acute insult Epilepsy, fever, CNS infection common
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Pediatric Sz Etiologies Meningitis
Altered mental status universal Seizures in 23% of meningitis cases Complex & GTC seizures common Simple seizures rarely seen HIB vaccine makes this etiology rare
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Pediatric Sz Etiologies Hyponatremia
Causes long duration szs and SE Infants < 6 months old, no clear etiol Too much water in formula Hypothermia (Temp < 36.5 degrees)
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Pediatric Sz Etiologies Cocaine Toxicity
Consider in new onset seizures Crack cocaine rocks ingested Especially when no other etiology Common in urban EDs
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Pediatric Seizures Seizure Outcome
Immature CNS, myelinization More prone to seizures More resistant to consequences Continuous seizures less toxic SE carries a low mortality (3-6%)
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Pediatric Seizures SE Outcome
Based on CNS status prior to SE Normal CNS, 64% remain intact Mortality related to two factors: Acute neurologic insult Chronic CNS condition
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Pediatric Seizures Seizure Type Classification
Generalized Involves both cerebral hemispheres Convulsive: tonic-clonic seizures Non-convulsive: absence seizures Partial Involves one cerebral hemisphere Simple: no impaired consciousness Complex: impaired consciousness
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Seizure Classification Generalized Seizures
Convulsive seizures Tonic sz: sustained contractions Clonic sz: rhythmic flexor spasms Tonic-clonic sz: combined mvmts Non-convulsive Simple absence: impaired consciousness Complex absence: brief motor mvmts
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Seizure Classification Partial Seizures
Simple seizures (no LOC) Focal motor (Jacksonian) Sensory or somatosensory Autonomic Psychic Complex (impaired consciousness) Involves some cognitive, affective sx Temporal lobe, psychomotor seizures
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Pediatric Seizures Other Generalized Sz Types
Neonatal seizures Benign childhood epilepsy (Rolandic) Infantile spasms (West syndrome) Lennox-Gastaut syndrome Atonic seizures Febrile seizures
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Pediatric Seizures Status Epilepticus Types
Convulsive SE : tonic-clonic sz Non-convulsive SE: no tonic-clonic sz Absence SE Complex partial SE Subtle SE: prolonged convulsive SE Worst prognosis, mortality > 30% Persistent coma, focal motor mvmts only
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Specific Seizure Types Generalized Tonic-Clonic Sz
Seizure described as a convulsion May occur primarily or secondarily May be preceded by prodrome or aura Tonic, then clonic phase Tongue biting, urinary incontinence Last for minutes, then post-ictal
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Specific Seizure Types Absence Seizure
Petit mal epilepsy Brief, limited motor activity Sudden interruption of consciousness Slight clonic mvmts, myoclonic jerks Automatisms also can be seen Last about 10 sec, not post-ictal
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Specific Seizure Types Partial Seizure
Focal motor sz (Jacksonian, frontal) Focus and/or lesion in cerebrum Sz clearly related to a lesion Sz type related to site of sz focus CT scan is useful Simple partial sz pts have no AMS
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Specific Seizure Types Complex Partial Seizure
Psychomotor, temporal lobe epilepsy Often a history of febrile seizures Complex aura, altered behavior Automatisms: lip smacking, chewing Not complete LOC, instead confused May secondarily generalize
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Specific Seizure Types Neonatal Seizure
Occur in first 28 days of life Most occur shortly after birth Subtle sz: lip smack, eye mvmt, apnea Perinatal asphyxia, metabolic abn Hypoglycemia, hypocalcemia CNS infection, hemorrhage, lesion
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Specific Seizure Types Benign Childhood Epilepsy
Rolandic epilepsy Onset between 3 and 13 years of age Often occurs upon awakening Facial mvmts, grimacing, vocalizations EEG diagnosis
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Specific Seizure Types Infantile Spasms
West syndrome Occurs up to one year May be symptomatic or idiopathic Sudden tonic movements of the head, trunk, extremities Must do full work-up, incl metabolic Caution, AED hepatotoxicity a risk
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Specific Seizure Types Lennox-Gastaut Syndrome
Onset from 1-8 years Peaks at 3-5 years Multiple seizure types GTC, tonic, absence, atonic szs ED Hx: exac of known sz disorder
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Specific Seizure Types Atonic Seizures
Astatic or akinetic seizures Sudden loss of motor tone Child falls to the floor May have myoclonic jerks No clear generalized seizure No etiology of apparent syncopal episode
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Specific Seizure Types Febrile Seizures
Age: 6 months to 5 years Related to rapid rise in temperature Brief, self-limited generalized sz Complex: Focal, > min, flurry 25% recurrence, esp if in child < 1 yr old Risk of epilepsy not significantly greater
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Specific Seizure Types Juvenile Myoclonic Epilepsy
Common in teens, young adults Etiology of generalized TC seizures History of staring spells History of AM clumsiness, myoclonus Sleep deprivation, EtOH precipitants Phenytoin: worse myoclonus, absence sz
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Specific SE Types Generalized Convulsive SE
Seizure lasting greater than 5-10 min Refractory to initial benzo therapy Flurry of seizures and coma CNS injury likely after minutes Glutamate, cell death, tissue necrosis Injury even if systemic sx controlled
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Specific SE Types Non-convulsive SE
No generalized tonic-clonic sz Absence SE Complex partial SE No frank coma More common in children Not always due to co-morbidity Mortality ?? not as high as in GCSE
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Specific SE Types Subtle SE
Late manifestation of GCSE, frank coma No longer with tonic-clonic mvmts Still actively seizing (electrical SE) Usu in older patients Marked co-morbidity (encephalopathic) Highest SE mortality
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Seizure Therapy Generalized Seizure Protocol
Benzodiazepines PR diazepam, IM midazolam, IV lorazepam Phenytoins Fosphenytoin can be given IV or IM Phenobarbital or valproate Less sedation with valproate Propofol or midazolam infusions EEG monitoring, BP support key
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Seizure Therapy Ongoing Therapies
Absence: Ethosuximide, valproate Atonic: Valproate, clonazepam, ethosuximide Myoclonic: Valproate, clonazepam Partial: Carbamazepine, phenytoin, valproate Generalized: Carbamazepine, phenytoin, phenobarb, primidone, valproate
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Case Presentations ED Pediatric Seizure Cases
Pediatric complex partial SE New onset SE in an adolescent New onset sz in a college student
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Pediatric SE: Pediatric Complex Partial SE
How do we Dx complex partial SE? What is the optimal Rx protocol? Why?
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Pediatric SE Hx 7 year old male Seizure-like activity?
Patient with staring spells Some headache and shaking movement, esp of hands Frontal headache, vomiting
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Pediatric SE Hx (con’t)
Seen at 2130, 2230 sign-out AMS, r/o seizure disorder “Once all of the labs are back, he should be OK to go home…”
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Pediatric SE Px 98.7 98/60 72 20 Well hydrated CV, lung exams normal
/ Well hydrated CV, lung exams normal Neuro exam intact
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Pediatric SE Clinical Course
0220 “episode” Tachycardia, BP OK, airway OK Confused, staring off into space Episode lasted < 5 minutes Resolved without any Rx
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Pediatric SE Clinical Course (con’t)
Three more episodes over 40’ Similar autonomic symptoms Some non-purposeful ext mvmts Diaphoresis, urinary incontinence Remained somnolent between episodes
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Pediatric SE Dx Repetitive episodes with AMS Autonomic symptoms noted
Non-purposeful mvmts noted Rule out complex partial status epilepticus (CPSE)
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Pediatric SE Rx IV lorazepam IV valproate Transfer to Children’s
ICU observation Uncomplicated course
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Adolescent SE: New Onset AMS/Spells
What is the AMS? Is it a seizure? How should we Rx new onset szs? What is the role of the ED EEG? When should it be ordered?
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Adolescent SE Hx 13 year old female Frontal HA and prior migraines
HA relieved with ibuprofen AMS in AM, with ?? motor activity Restless at home, thrashing on bed No other systemic sx or recent illness
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Adolescent SE Px Vitals OK, afebrile Alert, O x 3, NAD Head/Neck OK
Chest/cor/abd OK Neuro: No focal deficit. MS OK
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Adolescent SE Question # 1
What diagnostic tests are indicated at this point?
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Adolescent SE Question # 2
Did the patient have a seizure? Does it influence Dx, Rx?
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Adolescent SE Question # 3
Does the patient require admission for observation for possible new onset seizures?
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Adolescent SE Clinical Course
Labs, tox screen neg CT negative Neuro consult: EEG and then D/C Dx: AMS, r/o Seizure; migraine HA While EEG applied, pt with AMS Agitation, thrashing on cart
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Adolescent SE Question # 4
Is this repeat spell a seizure? What type?
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Adolescent SE Question # 5
Does this AMS and motor activity require Rx? What Rx?
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Adolescent SE Question # 6
Does the patient now require admission for observation for possible new onset seizures?
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Adolescent SE Clinical Course (con’t)
During EEG, pt with R face focal sz Leftward gaze noted Seizure then generalized Meds were given Seizure terminated
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Adolescent SE Question # 7
What med is to be used for seizure control / SE termination?
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Adolescent SE Question # 8
What med is to be used once SE is terminated? Why?
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Adolescent SE Question # 9
How should the meds be given? Why?
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Adolescent SE Clinical Course (con’t)
SE terminated with Rx Pt stabilized, still somnulent ALS transfer team to Children’s Pt with resolving AMS at time of D/C
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Adolescent SE Dx New onset SE
Complex partial seizures with generalized seizure / SE Hx migraine headaches
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Adolescent SE Rx Lorazepam to Rx the acute sz
2mg IVP x 2 Valproate for ongoing protection 25 mg/kg load administered Infused over 20 minutes PRN meds during transfer
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Juvenile Myoclonic Sz: College Student, New Onset Sz
What is the likely etiology? What is JME? What are the long-term implications? How to RX once the sz terminated?
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Juvenile Myoclonic Sz Hx
21 year old college student No prior neuro history Final exams, sleepless Great party after the last exam Pt with single generalized sz Seizure upon awakening
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Juvenile Myoclonic Sz Px
Vitals OK Neuro: slightly post-ictal Exam otherwise normal Patient has a 2nd seizure in the ED
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Juvenile Myoclonic Sz Dx
Juvenile myoclonic epilepsy Related to sleep deprivation, alcohol consumption Occurs upon awakening Responds best to valproate Phenytoin may exacerbate sx
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Juvenile Myoclonic Sz Rx
Benzodiazepines to Rx the acute sz Ongoing protection an issue Valproate is likely the drug of choice Phenytoin may not be optimal Avoid status epilepticus
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Conclusions Clinical Pearls
Acute, repetitive spells = sz Ongoing altered mental status = complex partial SE Treat acute szs with lorazepam Valproate is the etiology-specific ongoing Rx in many young people Know the specific JME clinical setting
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Recommendations Management Implications
Educate about sz etiologies Make multiple drugs available Alternate routes should be used A protocol should exist Utilize EEG when necessary Be aware of optimal Rx at disposition
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