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Title: Pediatric Neurology Emergencies


1
Pediatric Neurology Emergencies
  • Graham Thompson
  • Cheri Nijssen-Jordan
  • 2003/11/06

2
Objectives
  • 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

3
Case1
  • 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

4
Case 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

5
Headache
  • 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

6
H/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

7
Headache - Epidemiology
  • Prevalence
  • 7-9 yo - 60-69
  • 15 yo 75
  • Chief complaint in 0.7-1.3 of PED visits

8

9
Headache 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

10
H/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

11
Headache 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)

12
Headache 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

13
Pediatric Migraine IHS Definition
14
Pediatric Migraine - Classification
  • Migraine without aura
  • Migraine with aura (classic)
  • Migraine equivalents

15
Pediatric Migraine - Epidemiology
  • 3-5 of school-aged children - MgtF
  • Up to 20 of adolescents - MltF
  • Highest frequence Mon,Tues,Wed, daytime

16
Pediatric Migraine Tx Options
  • Non-medicinal
  • NSAIDs
  • Ibuprofen
  • Ketorolac
  • Dopamine Antagonists
  • phenothiazines
  • 5-HT agonists
  • Ergots
  • Triptans
  • Novel Therapies
  • Valproate

17
Migraine - 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

18
Migraine Dopamine Antagonists
  • Metoclopramide, prochlorperazine, promethazine
  • Antiemetic effect helpful in gastric stasis
    delayed absorptionseen in migraines
  • Drowsiness, hypotension, extrapyramidal effects

19
Migraine 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

20
Triptans 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

21
Ergots
  • 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

22
Valproate
  • 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

23
Drugs 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
24
Migraine 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

25
Migraine 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

26
Pediatric 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

27
Case 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

28
Simple 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.

29
Complex Febrile Seizure
  • Focal
  • gt 15 minutes
  • gt1 in 24 hrs
  • Post-ictal involvement

30
Febrile Seizures - Risk Factors
  • Height of temperatture
  • Male
  • Family Hx of febrile seizures

31
Febrile 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)

32
Febrile Seizures and Immunizations
  • Increased in
  • Day of DPTP-Hib
  • 8-14 days post MMR
  • NO long term consequences

33
Febrile Seizures AAP Guidelines
34
AAP Guidelines
35
To 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

36
Febrile 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

37
Febrile 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

38
Consequences 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

39
Febrile 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

40
Febrile 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

41
Febrile 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

42
Case 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

43
Status 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.

44
S.E. Etiology in Pediatrics
  • 26 acute CNS insult
  • Bleed/trauma
  • Infection
  • 21 underlying sz D/O
  • Sudden discontinuation of Meds
  • Fever
  • 53 unknown!!!

45
SE 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

46
S. E. - Therapies
  • Benzos
  • Phenytoin/Fosphenytoin
  • Phenobarb
  • Refractory S.E. Tx

47
S.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

48
S.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

49
S.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

50
S.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)

51
Refractory S.E.
  • Failure to respond to sequential treatment with
    benzo, phenytoin, phenobarb
  • Midazolam infusion
  • Propofol infusion
  • VPA infusion

52
AED 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
53
Case 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

54
Bells 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

55
Bells 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

56
Bells 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

57
Bells Palsy - Treatment
  • Eye protection
  • 85-90 in children spontaneously resolve with
    most occurring within 2 months of onset

58
Bells 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

59
Bells 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

60
Case 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

61
Case 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)
63
Non-Accidental Trauma
  • DONT FORGET IT IN YOUR
    DIFFERENTIAL
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