Title: Benzodiazepines
1Benzodiazepines
- 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
2Case 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.
3Case 2 Presentation
- 24 year old male with IVDA brought by police with
generalized tonic-clonic seizures and no IV access
4Critical Questions
- What is this best first-line treatment?
- What if I cant obtain IV access?
- Complicating Factors Status Epilepticus?
Hypoxia, Hypoglycemia, Fever
5What does the literature show?
- Benzodiazepines
- Phenytoin/Fosphenytoin
- Phenobarbital
- Valproate
- Anesthetics
6Benzodiazepines
- 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
7What 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
8What 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
9If you have no IV access, are there alternatives
routes for benzodiazepines administration?
- Intranasal (Midazolam)
- Buccal (Midazolam)
- IM (Lorazepam, Midazolam)
- Rectal (Diazepam, Midazolam)
- ET (Diazepam)
10Rectal 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
11Rectal 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
12Paraldehyde
- 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
13Intranasal 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.
14Intramuscular 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
15Intramuscular 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
16Conclusions
-
- When the IV access is unavailable
- IN or IM midazolam
- Rectal diazepam
- IM fosphenytoin