Title: Pediatric Neurology Emergencies
1Pediatric Neurology Emergencies
- Graham Thompson
- Cheri Nijssen-Jordan
- 2003/11/06
2Objectives
- Approach to H/A in Pediatrics
- DDx of Pediatric H/A
- Migraines in Pediatrics
- Febrile Seizures
- AAP recommendations
- prophylaxis
- Status Epilepticus
- Idiopathic Facial Nerve Paralysis
- treatment
3Case1
- 14 yo girl with headache for past 2 wks
- Started intermitent but now always there
(2-3/10), sometimes throbs more (8/10) across
front of head - Started to feel nauseated, no emesis
- Has been taking tylenol with minimal help
- Has had previous H/A but only last few hrs
- Dosent wake from sleep, doesnt wake with H/A
4Case 1 cont.
- No fevers, but feels stuffy/congested at times
- No FHx migraine
- No motion sickness
- Had concussion playing hockey (AAA boys league) 8
months ago, no change to current play - No behaviour/school changes
- Took minocycline x 3-4 days then stopped
5Headache
- Pain sensitive structures around the head
- Vessels, dura, meninges
- Sinuses, teeth
- Musclulature
- In general (but not a rule!!!)
- frontal pain- supratentorial structures and
vessels via trigeminal nv - Occipital pain posterior fossa via cranial nvs
6H/A patterns
- Acute
- Single episode
- URTI, dental pain, bleed, initial migraine,
cocaine/amphetamines - Acute-recurrent
- Episodic pain with symptom-free intervals
- Migraine, tension, cluster, substance abuse, HTN
- Chronic progressive
- Gradual increase in frequency and severity with
worrisome features - Space occupying lesion, chronic meningitis, IIH,
hydro, HTN - Chronic nonprogressive
- gt 15 H/A per month, gt 4 months, gt 4hrs
- Mixed
- Migraine or analgesic abuse
7Headache - Epidemiology
- Prevalence
- 7-9 yo - 60-69
- 15 yo 75
- Chief complaint in 0.7-1.3 of PED visits
8 9Headache in the PED
- Serious etiology
- 19/288 (6.6)
- 15 viral meningitis
- 1 - Shunt malfunction
- 1 oncology
- 1 hydrocephalus
- 1 punctate hemorrhage
- All had abnormal hx or px
10H/A in PED
- Viral URTI 28.5 39
- Migraine 8.5 21
- Tension 1.5 - 29
- Trauma 1.3 - 20
- Tumor 1.5 - 4
- Shunt 2 11.5
- Other
- Serious etiology 6.6 15
- All but 1 child in all 4 studies - abN Hx or Px
- Lewis DW Sem in Ped Neuro 2001 8(1)46
11Headache in the PED
- When to worry.
- Chronic progressive pattern
- H/A or vomiting on awakening
- Age lt 3yo
- thunderclap headache
- Focal neuro signs
- VP shunt
- Neurocutaneous syndrome (NF, TS)
12Headache and Tumors
- Childhood Brain Tumor Consortium (JNeurooncol
1991 1031) - 3291 tumors
- 62 had H/A
- 98 of these had at least 1 problem on Hx/Px (50
had gt3) - Hx
- N/V, changes in gait, strength, personality,
speech, school - Px
- Papilledema, ataxia, abN EOM, DTR, Visual acuity
- THERE IS NO CLASSIC BRAIN TUMOR HEADACHE
13Pediatric Migraine IHS Definition
14Pediatric Migraine - Classification
- Migraine without aura
- Migraine with aura (classic)
- Migraine equivalents
15Pediatric Migraine - Epidemiology
- 3-5 of school-aged children - MgtF
- Up to 20 of adolescents - MltF
- Highest frequence Mon,Tues,Wed, daytime
16Pediatric Migraine Tx Options
- Non-medicinal
- NSAIDs
- Ibuprofen
- Ketorolac
- Dopamine Antagonists
- phenothiazines
- 5-HT agonists
- Ergots
- Triptans
- Novel Therapies
- Valproate
17Migraine - NSAIDs
- RDBPC study of 6-12 yo using 7.5 mg Ibuprofen
- Significant reduction in pain, nausea, need for
rescue med, significant increase in pain free
status _at_ 2 hrs - Lewis et al Headache 2002 42780
- RDBCO study of Ibuprofen 10mg/kg, acetaminophen
15 mg/kg and placebo - Significant reduction in pain _at_ 2 hrs.
- Ibuprofen 2X as likely as acet (OR 2.2 CI 1.1-40)
- Hamlainen et al Neuro 1997 48103
- Ketorolac
- No good peds studies
- Advantage - not PO intake
18Migraine Dopamine Antagonists
- Metoclopramide, prochlorperazine, promethazine
- Antiemetic effect helpful in gastric stasis
delayed absorptionseen in migraines - Drowsiness, hypotension, extrapyramidal effects
19Migraine 5-HT Agonists
- Triptans
- 50 6-8 yo 0.06 mg/kg SC sumatriptan
- 78 red. in pain (mod-sev to none-mild) in 60 min
- Recurrence 6
- Flushing, dizziness, tingling, chest pain, neck
stiffness
20Triptans in Teens
- 1 yr study of 437 adolescents treated 3273
migraines (10 mg nasal sumatriptan) - 76 pain relief in 2 hrs, 43 pain free by 2 hrs
- IN dosing ranging from 5-20 mg
- Improvement in VAS _at_ 2 hours, and has low rates
of recurrence (6) - Note adolescent had huge placebo effect (up to
57) - Winner et al Headache 2002 42675
- Winner et al Headache 2003 43451
21Ergots
- DHE less side effects that Ergotamine (N/V,
hypertension, flushing, angina-like episodes) - 0.1-0.5 mg IV
- Rarely used in ED setting in children
22Valproate
- No pediatric studies
- Annals EM June 2003
- 40 pts received 500 cc NS then randomized to 500
mg VPA vs 10 mg prochlorperazine - VAS score q 15 min x 1 hr
- VPA had poor response in terms of pain and nausea
23Drugs in Pediatric Migraine
Drug Dose Route
Ibuprofen 10 mg/kg PO
Naproxen 5 mg/kg PO
Ketorolac 0.5 mg/kg (max 30mg/dose) IV/IM
Metoclopramide 1-2 mg/kg (max 10mg/dose) PO/IV/IM
Prochlorperazine 0.1 mg/kg PO/IV/IM
Sumatriptan Child -0.06 mg/kg Adol 6mg Adol 5-20mg SC SC IN
DHE 0.1 0.5 mg IV/IM
24Migraine Equivalents
- Benign paroxysmal torticollis
- Infancy, torticollis, pallor, vomiting,
behaviour, bilat, 4hrs 4 days, resolve by mid
childhood - Benign paroxysmal vertigo (38)
- Unsteadiness, pallor, fear, spinning, 1-5 min.
1-3 yo, usually leaves within 2-3 yrs - Abdominal migraine vs cyclical vomiting (18.5)
- Crampy, periumbilical, nausea, vomiting, pallor,
4 - 10 yo, may develop classic migraines
25Migraine Equivalents
- Acephalgic migraine (28.7)
- Visual auras without H/A, lt 10 min, 5-12 yo
- alice in wonderland
- Acute confusional migraine
- Confusion, agitiation, memory loss, adolescence
- Retrospective!!!!!!
- Made up 9.9 of migraine visits to neurologist
26Pediatric H/A Reviews
- Qureshi F Lewis D Managing headache in the
Pediatric Emergency Department Clinical Pediatric
Emergency Medicine 2003 4(3) - Lewis D Headache in the Pediatric Emergency
Department Seminars in Pediatric Neurology 2001
8(1)46
27Case 2
- 16 mo boy previously well brought by EMS because
of sz at home - Lasted 1 min
- Eyes rolled back, arms twitching
- Crying after
- Has had URTI over past 2-3 days
28Simple Febrile Seizures - Definition
- Normal preceding neuro and dvt status
- Age 6 mo 5 yrs
- brief (lt15 minutes)
- generalized seizure
- only once in a 24 hour period
- febrile child who did not have either central
nervous system infection or a severe metabolic
disturbance.
29Complex Febrile Seizure
- Focal
- gt 15 minutes
- gt1 in 24 hrs
- Post-ictal involvement
30Febrile Seizures - Risk Factors
- Height of temperatture
- Male
- Family Hx of febrile seizures
31Febrile Seizures - Epidemiology
- 2-5 of children
- Peak onset is 1 yo, mean 19 23 mo
- Sz is 1st sign of illness in 25-50 of cases
- FHx in 25-40
- 1 parent 4.4X risk
- 2 parents 20X risk
- Sibling 3.6X risk
- 2nd degree relatives 2.7X risk
- Infections?
- Of 445 cases 34 AOM, 12 URTI, 6 viral exanthem
6 pneumonia - HHV 6/7 may not be as common as previously
thought - HSV influenza A
- Same baseline risk for invasive bacteremia (1)
32Febrile Seizures and Immunizations
- Increased in
- Day of DPTP-Hib
- 8-14 days post MMR
- NO long term consequences
33Febrile Seizures AAP Guidelines
34AAP Guidelines
35To LP or not?
- All studies are retrospective
- 503 pts with meningitis (VB) age 2mo 15 y
- 115 had sz but none were isolated sz
- 452 6mo-5yo with fever and sz
- 15 meningitis, all had septic appearance,
photophobia, stiff neck or Kernig () - 241 6 mo-5yo with fever and sz
- All had LP, 11 bacteria menngitis, all had one of
following 1)seen MD in past 48hrs 2)sz recurring
in ED 3)focal sz 4) abN neuro exam
36Febrile Seizures Recurrence Risk
- 1/3 will have recurrence, ½ of these will have
mutiple episodes - Highest in
- Young at 1st presentation
- FHx
- Low fever
- Short duration between start of fever and sz (lt24
hrs) - Up to ½ of recurrences occur in 1st 2 hrs
37Febrile Seizures Recurrence Risk
- Meta-analysis of recurrence risk
- Onset younger than 12 mo
- Febrile or afebrile seizure in 1st degree
relative - Rectal temp lt 40 C during 1st sz
- Offringa et al
38Consequences of Febrile Seizures?
- Epilepsy
- General population 1
- Simple febrile szs risk of afebrile szs by age
25 increases to 2.4 - gt1 focal complex febrile sz may by up to
30 - Cognitive Outcome
- No changes in several american and british
studies
39Febrile Seizures Prevention?
- Antipyretics
- No evidence to support use
- Uhari et al J peds 1995 126991 180 kids RDBPC
(plac plac, plac acet, diaz acet, diaz
plac) no difference in recurrence x2yrs - Schnaiderman et al Eur J Peds 1993 152747 104
kids RCT acet q4h or prn, no difference - Van Stuijvenberg et al Peds 1998 1021 230 kids
RDBPC ibuprofen to plac no diff X1yr - Meremikwa et al Cochrane Database 20024 no
evidence supporting use of acet to prevent
Febrile Sz
40Febrile Seizures Prevention?
- Antiepileptics
- Phenobarb definite reduction in recurrences (OR
0.54 NNT 8) if taken continuously, no
difference if intermitent - Hyperactivity, irritability, bld levels, sleep
d/o, SJS - VPA definite reduction in recurrences (OR
0.09 NNT 4) also if continous - Hepatotoxicity, thrombocytopenia, pancreatitis,
wt change - Intermitent diazepam reduction by 44 per
person per year - Ataxia, lethary, irritibility, sleep d/o
- Pheytoin, carbamazepine no difference
41Febrile Sz papers
- Warden CR et al Evaluation and Management of
febrile seizures in the Out-of-hospital and
emergency department setting Annals of Emergency
Medicine 2003 41(2) - Baumann RJ et al Treatment of Children with
Simple Febrile Seizures the AAP Practice
Parameter Pediatric Neurology 2000 2311
42Case 3
- 18 mo girl started seizing _at_ home 2 hours ago
- Stiffened, unresponsive, R arm twitching the L
starting - Lasted about 4 minutes
- Very sleepy post ictal, not responding to parents
- Had 2 more similar szs in past 1hr so brought in
by EMS, still not responding to voice (but
maintaining airway!!) - Szs again just as you walk in the room
- Currently on tegretol because other meds didnt
work - No fevers, no intercurrent illness
- Last sz 3 months ago
43Status Epilepticus
- WHO Definition
- a condition characterized by and epileptic sz
that is sufficitnely prolonged or repeated at
sufficiently brief intervals so as to produce an
unvaring or enduring epileptic condition - Reality
- Continuous or repetitive seizure activity of at
least 30 minutes with failure to regain
consciousness between convulsions.
44S.E. Etiology in Pediatrics
- 26 acute CNS insult
- Bleed/trauma
- Infection
- 21 underlying sz D/O
- Sudden discontinuation of Meds
- Fever
- 53 unknown!!!
45SE Problems
- Hypoxia
- Impaired ventilation, increased secretions,
increased O2 consumption, impaired O2 delivery,
metabolic and respiratory acidosis - Brain injury
- Hypoxia and perfusion related (CBF unable to keep
up with demands - may occur more frequently with younger age
leading to MR, behaviour changes, motor deficits - Morbidity
- Age dependent, up to 30 in lt1 yo, 6 in those gt
3yo - Mortality
- 3
46S. E. - Therapies
- Benzos
- Phenytoin/Fosphenytoin
- Phenobarb
- Refractory S.E. Tx
47S.E. - Benzos
- Lorazepam vs Diazepam vs Midazolam
- Loraz has smaller volume of distribution, longer
acting (12-24 hrs vs 5-30 min), less respiratory
depression - Small study (n86) loraz 3 vs diaz 31
- Rectal diaz has less resp depression than IV
- Midazolam not used in newborns as may lower sz
threshold - Midaz may be used PO, IV, IM, IN
48S.E. Benzos
- Cochrane Review August 2003
- Lorazepam vs other AED in the PED
- Only one study
- No difference in stopping szs, recurrence rate,
respiratory depression rate or need for rescue
AED in IV lorazepam vs diazepam - Statistically significant diff in rectal loraz
over diaz, but numbers too small to make
recomendations
49S.E. Phenytoin/Fosphenytoin
- Fosphenytoin
- Phosphate ester pro-drug of phenytoin
- Advantages of Fosphenytoin
- Not in propylene glycol base so less tissue
toxicity and cardiac side effects (hypotension,
bradys, VF) - pH 8 (phenytoin 12)
- Compatible with any IV solution including
Dextrose - Rapid IV infusion rate (up to 3X faster)
- IM route possible,
- Disadvantages
- Pruritis (usually face and perineum) in up to 50
- paresthesia
- High cost 1G 90 compared to 6
- Recent studies show may have overall
institutional cost savings because of less side
effects
50S.E. - Barbituates
- Phenobarbital
- Drug of choice in neonates
- High sedative and CR depression which may be
enhance with prior benzo Tx - Prolonged start time (15-20 minutes)
51Refractory S.E.
- Failure to respond to sequential treatment with
benzo, phenytoin, phenobarb - Midazolam infusion
- Propofol infusion
- VPA infusion
52AED Doses - Pediatric
Drug Dose Onset
Lorazepam 0.05-0.1 mg/kg IV/PR 2-3 min
Diazepam 0.1-0.3 mg/kgIV 0.5 mg/kg PR 1-3 min
Phenytoin 10-20 mg/kg IV 10-30 min
Fosphenytoin 20 mgPE/kg 10-30 min
Phenobarbital 20 mg/kg 10-20 min
Midazolam 0.1-0.2 mg/kg Inf. 1-3 ug/kg/m
Propofol 1-2 mg/kg Inf. 25-100 ug/kg/min
VPA 15-20mg/kg Inf. 5 mg/kg/hr
53Case 4
- 6 yo girl brought in by mother because teacher
said her face wasnt working properly - Cant smile properly, L side doesnt move
- Had pain beside L ear yesterday
- Cough and runny nose 2 wks ago
- No fever, no rash
54Bells Palsy(Idiopathic Facial Nerve Palsy)
- Unilateral facial nerve palsy
- Sudden onset 1-2 wks post viral infection
- Most common infectious involvement
- EBV, HSV, mumps, lyme disease, other viral
- ? Immune demyelination vs edema
55Bells Palsy
- DDx
- Lyme disaese (may be up to 50 in endemic areasa)
- AOM, mastoiditis
- Ramsay Hunt (Herpes Zoster Oticus)
- NMD (Myasthenia gravis)
- Tumor
- Leukemia/lymphoma
- Schwannoma
- parotid
- Neurofibromatosis
- Brainstem infarcts
- Stroke
- Trauma
56Bells Palsy
- Clinical
- Unilateral
- Pain may precede
- Peripheral nerve weakness (lower motor neuron) so
involves upper and lower face - Flat nasolabial fold
- Difficulty closing eye exposure keratitis
- Difficulty smiling
- ½ may loose taste on anterior ipsilat 2/3 of
tongue (dysgeusia) - Decreased tearing vs crocodile tears (epiphoria)
- hyperacusis
57Bells Palsy - Treatment
- Eye protection
- 85-90 in children spontaneously resolve with
most occurring within 2 months of onset
58Bells Palsy - Treatment
- Steroids?
- Cochrane review
- 3 studies, n 117, not great randomization, 1
study had no control group - No reduction in incomplete recovery or
cosmetically disabling sequelae - Couldnt recommend
- Salman et al J child Neuro 2001 16565
- Systematic review of Bells Palsy in children lt18
- 8 trials, 1 exclusively children, 5 randomized,
5 blinded - No evidence for benefit
59Bells Palsy - Treatment
- Acyclovir?
- Cochrane review
- 2 studies Acyc steroid vs Acyc, acyc vs steroid
- Couldnt comment on primary outcomes (reduction
of incomplete recovery _at_ 1 yr, adverse events,
paralysis _at_ 6mo) as not enough data - Couldnt recommend
- De Diego et al Laryngoscope 1998 108(4)573
- 101 pts randomized to prednisone 1mg/kg OD x10 vs
acyclovir 800 mg TID x10 - Recovery _at_ 3 months using nv function tests
higher in steroid vs acyclovir - Adour et al Ann Otol Rhinol Laryngol 1996
105371 - Quicker return to functional muscle control with
combined acyclovir and prednisone
60Case 5
- 2 mo infant brought in with lethargy and vomiting
x 8 in last 4 hours this pm - Normal U/O and BM
- Felt warm to touch _at_ home
- Had been crying all night for past 2 nights
- Previously well, IUTD, had tylenol yest. to try
to stop crying - Term, uncomplicated G1 preg
- Child _at_ day home with other kids, all well
61Case 5 cont
- 37.8 160 22 poor effort 94 BP UA
- Looks unwell, pale
- Poor spont. movement
- Font slightly full
- Pupils a bit sluggish, 4mm
- No source for infection on exam
- SWU done
- LP grossly bloody, not clearing over 4 tubes
- started on A/B
62(No Transcript)
63Non-Accidental Trauma
- DONT FORGET IT IN YOUR
DIFFERENTIAL