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Benzodiazepines

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Benzodiazepines Phenytoin/Fosphenytoin Phenobarbital Valproate Anesthetics Benzodiazepines Review of 47 clinical trials involving 1346 patients 79% control rate of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Benzodiazepines


1
Benzodiazepines
  • What are the Best Non-IV Parenteral Options for a
    Seizing Patient?
  • William C. Dalsey, MD, FACEP, MBA
  • Department of Emergency Medicine
  • Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital
  • New Jersey

2
Case 1 Presentation
  • A seven year old with spina bifida and arnold
    chiari fell and hit her head. She has
    intermittent generalized tonic clonic seizures
    without return to baseline. IV access cant be
    obtained.

3
Case 2 Presentation
  • 24 year old male with IVDA brought by police with
    generalized tonic-clonic seizures and no IV access

4
Critical Questions
  • What is this best first-line treatment?
  • What if I cant obtain IV access?
  • Complicating Factors Status Epilepticus?
    Hypoxia, Hypoglycemia, Fever

5
What does the literature show?
  • Benzodiazepines
  • Phenytoin/Fosphenytoin
  • Phenobarbital
  • Valproate
  • Anesthetics

6
Benzodiazepines
  • Review of 47 clinical trials involving 1346
    patients
  • 79 control rate of seizure
  • Higher rate than the VA Cooperative Study
    probably because of selection bias
  • No superiority of one benzo over the other in
    terminating seizures

Treiman. Epilepsia 1989304-10
7
What do Clinical Policies/Guidelines and the
literature support?
  • Class A recommendation both IV diazepam
    followed by phenytoin or the use of IV lorazepam
    are acceptable acute treatment strategies
  • Is lorazepam better?

Treiman. NEJM 1998 339792-798
8
What else does the literature show?
  • Class B Recommendations
  • All benzodiazepines are highly effective. In
    pediatric patients lorazepam may be preferred due
    to less risk of respiratory suppression
  • Treiman. Epilepsia 1989304-10
  • Prensky. NEJPM 1967 276779-784
  • Leppik. JAMA 1983 2491452-1454


9
If you have no IV access, are there alternatives
routes for benzodiazepines administration?
  • Intranasal (Midazolam)
  • Buccal (Midazolam)
  • IM (Lorazepam, Midazolam)
  • Rectal (Diazepam, Midazolam)
  • ET (Diazepam)

10
Rectal Diazepam
  • Diazepam well absorbed rectally gel or solution
    better than suppositories
  • Tmax 17 minutes with therapeutic effect earlier
  • May provide longer acting anticonvulsant effect
    than intravenous administration due to slower
    absorption rate
  • Has been used effectively by EMS
  • Double blind placebo controlled studies have
    demonstrated its effectiveness

Dieckmann. Ann Emerg Med 1994 23216-224 Cereghin
o. Neurology 1998511274-1282 Remy. Epilepsia
199222(2)3530358
11
Rectal Diazepam
  • Dosing is age dependent
  • 2 -5 years .5 mg / kg
  • 6 - 11 years .3 mg / kg
  • gt 11 years .2 mg /kg
  • Prepackaged commercial syringes available in 2.5,
    5, 10, 20 mg

12
Paraldehyde
  • Can be given IM or PR parenteral preparation no
    longer available in the US
  • Old literature reports effectiveness but was used
    before availability of phenytoin or
    benzodiazepines
  • Can cause heart failure, hypotension, pulmonary
    hemorrhage, tissue necrosis
  • 80 bioavailable when given rectally

Ramsay. Epilepsia 198930(suppl)S1-S3
13
Intranasal Midazolam
  • Randomized controlled clinical trials support the
    effectiveness of treating status epilepticus in
    pediatric patients with dosages of .2mg/kg
  • Faster and perhaps more effective than rectal
    diazepam in RCTs
  • Lahat, Eli. British Medical Journal 32(7253) 8
    July 2000 p 83-86.
  • Scott RC. Lancet 1999353623-62.
  • Fisgin, Tunc. Child Neur 172 Feb 2002,
    p.123-126.

14
Intramuscular Midazolam
  • Water soluble well absorbed
  • Adult dose 10 - 15 mg (.2mg/kg)
  • Case reports

Jawad. J Neurol Neurosurg Psych 1986
491050-1054 Chamberlain. Pediatr Emerg Care
1997 1392-94
15
Intramuscular Fosphenytoin
  • 100 bioavailable
  • 20 PE /kg 20 cc intragluteal
  • Therapeutic levels at 1 hours
  • Pruritis and paresthesias most common side
    effects
  • Cardiac monitoring not necessary

DeToledo. Emerg Med 1996 supplement26-31
16
Conclusions
  • When the IV access is unavailable
  • IN or IM midazolam
  • Rectal diazepam
  • IM fosphenytoin
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