Title: Adult Seizure Management for the Family Practitioner
1Adult Seizure Management for the Family
Practitioner
- Huey Lin, R3
- Swedish Family Medicine
- December 2001
2Case - Charlie B or C Brown
- 27 year old male who I saw in saw in clinic in
February 2001 for back pain who was recently
admitted for change in mental status. - 5-10 seconds of blurry vision -gt resolved. Then
30 minutes later, asked to help a co-worker.
From this point on, no memory of what happened.
3Case continued
- From co-worker
- Chas came to help me and I noted his shirt was
wet. He sat down next to me. Then the gum he was
chewing fell out of his mouth, and he was
drooling. I couldnt snap him out of it - even
after shaking him. He then got back up and weaved
around the room a little before sitting down next
to another co-worker.
4Case continued
- Another co-worker
- Charles then sat next to me, and seemed dazed.
When I asked him where he was, he kept on saying,
yeah, yeah, yeah for some time. He then seemed
to recognize me, and thats when we called the
paramedics. It was very, very odd. I think hes
into something ltwink, winkgt
5Case continued
- From the ER MD
- Mr. Brown came in about 30 minutes after his
event. He seemed lucid, coherent. He was
complaining of a headache, and the first thing he
remembers is talking to Mr. Van Pelt. - He had no visible trauma and had not lost
continence. We drew the usual labs and did the
complimentary head CT - but only one per visit.
6Case continued
- Yeah, I felt pretty good by the time I got to the
ER. I knew what was happening. - Something like this has happened to me before,
but Ill tell you more about that later. - I was in a car crash in spring 2000 and my noggin
got a goose egg, but thats about it. - As to my family, my great grandfather had
seizures - but he was born really premature. - And yeah, I admit...I smoke a little weed about
1-2 times a week.
7Epidemiology of Epilepsy
- Estimated 2-4 million people in the US -- about 1
of 50 children and 1 of 100 adults -- are
affected - Some debate if prevalence higher in children or
the elderly - Less than 50 have an identifiable cause
- There is a 9 cumulative lifetime incidence rate
of seizures but only a 3 cumulative lifetime
incidence of epilepsy
8Causes of Epileptic Seizures
- Fewer than half of patients have an identifiable
cause. - Congenital brain malformations, inborn errors of
metabolism, high fever, head trauma, brain
tumors, CVA, intracranial infection, cerebral
degeneration, withdrawal states, and iatrogenic
drug causes.
9Common Causes of Provoked Seizures
- Massive sleep deprivation
- Excessive stimulant use
- Withdrawal from sedative drugs or alcohol
- Substance abuse (cocaine, methamphetamine)
- High fever
- Hypoglycemia
- Electrolyte imbalance
- Hypoxia
10Differential Diagnosis of Seizures
- Syncope
- Panic attacks
- Paroxysmal sleep behavior
- Pseudoseizures
- Breath-holding spells
11Basic seizures types
- Loss of consciousness?
- NO
- Simple partial
- YES
- Complex partial
- Generalized tonic-clonic
- Absence
- Cortical area affected
- PART OF CORTEX
- Simple partial
- Complex partial - usually temporal lobe
- ENTIRE CORTEX
- Generalized tonic-clonic
- Absence
12Simple Partial Seizure
- Usually lasts 5-10 seconds most less than a
minute - Symptoms dependent on cortical area involved
- No loss of consciousness
- No postictal state
- Difficult to differentiate between psychiatric
disorders (key is paroxysmal nature and duration
of seizure) - EEG - normal or focal spikes
13Complex Partial Seizure
- Most common type of seizures in adults
- Variable duration, but typically less than 3
minutes - Appears awake, but not responsive - often stare
or have automatisms - If restrained, may become hostile or aggressive
- Postictal period - somnolence, confusion, and
headache up for up to several hours - No memory of what took place during seizure
- EEG - focal activity spreading to involve one or
both hemispheres
14Generalized Tonic-Clonic Seizure
- Usually lasts 1-2 minutes
- Abrupt loss of consciousness, often preceded by
scream - All muscles become stiff (tonic) followed by
twitching/jerking movements (clonic) - Expect cyanosis, mouth injuries, or other bodily
injuries - Can be preceded by any partial seizure
- Postictal period - usually deep sleep with
hyperventilation then gradual wakening with
complaint of headache - EEG - series of generalized, high-amplitude
spikes
15Absence Seizure
- Usually lasts between 5-10 seconds but
frequently in clusters - Considered a seizure disorder of childhood
- Absence before age 5 associated with mental
retardation and tendency for future seizures - Sudden staring with impaired consciousness with
eye blinking and lip smacking for longer seizures - EEG - characteristic generalized, 3 per second,
spike and wave
16Epileptic Syndromes and Other Seizure Types
- There are other seizure types such as clonic,
myoclonic, tonic, and atonic. - There are epileptic syndromes characterized by
patterns of clinical features, age of onset,
family history, and associated neurologic signs
and symptoms. - BUT, almost all of the other seizures types and
all of the syndromes have onset in childhood and
so will not be reviewed today.
17Clinical Evaluation of Seizures
-
- HISTORY is the most important part of the
clinical evaluation. Pointed questions are often
needed. - Obtain as accurate of a description from patient
and witness(es). -
18Clinical Evaluation of Seizures
- Before the seizure
- Was there an aura?
- Was there an identifiable trigger?
- If there is a history of seizure, what are known
precipitants or triggers.
19Clinical Evaluation of Seizures
- During the seizure
- Was there signs of impaired consciousness?
- What was the patient actually doing?
- Was there loss of urine or stool?
- How long did the episode last?
- If h/o seizures, was this a typical/atypical
episode?
20Clinical Evaluation of Seizures
- After the seizure
- For the observer, was the patient postictal? If
no observer, did patient know where he/she was,
what had happened immediately after episode? - If postictal, how long was it?
- Did the patient have any complaints when s/he
became more awake?
21Clinical Evaluation of Seizures
- Other history to obtain besides event history
- Medical history febrile seizures, head injury,
CVA, malignancy, infectious diseases - Family history febrile seizures, epilepsy in
close relative, h/o neurological disorders - Social history travel, occupation, substance
abuse
22Back to C. Brown...
- Aura? Maybehad blurry vision 30 minutes prior to
episode - Trigger? Not identifiable
- Impaired consciousness? Yeah, yeah, yeah
- Good description from witnesses about event
- Loss of continence? Negative dirty underwear
sign.
- Duration? About 3 minutes
- Postictal? Difficult to say headache, little
groggy, but claims knew his location immediately
afterwards - Medical history h/o minor head trauma, unusual
episode earlier in month - Family history yes, but distant relative
- Social history no travel, works in medical
setting, likes joints
23Back to C. Brown
- With this history, did this gentleman have a
seizure? - If so, what type of seizure?
24Seizure Management
25Acute Seizure Management
- Airway
- Breathing
- Circulation
26Acute Seizure Management Status Epilepticus
- Vast majority of adult seizures will complete in
2 minutes few will go into status epilepticus. - Status epilepticus is defined as
- one generalized tonic-clonic seizure lasting
more than 5 minutes - or
- two generalized tonic-clonic seizures occurring
in 1 hour
27Acute Seizure Management Status Epilepticus
- Benzodiazepines
- Lorazepam 0.1 mg/kg IV at 1-2 mg/min up to 10
mg. One protocol lists 4 mg as good initial dose. - Diazepam - 0.2 mg/kg IV at 2 mg/min up to 20 mg.
Can also be given ET or PR. - Midazolam - 2.5-15 mg IV or 0.2 mg/kg IM. Very
short acting. - BE PREPARED TO INTUBATE!
28Acute Seizure Management Status Epilepticus
- Fosphenytoin
- Fosphenytoin - 15-20 phenytoin equivalent/kg at
100-150 mg phenytoin equivalent/min may be given
IM. - 20-30 minute onset so must also use smaller doses
of benzodiazepine - Give too rapidly and may cause hypotension or
arrhythmias.
29Acute Seizure Management Status Epilepticus
- Barbituates
- May also be used, but majority of experience with
this medication is the ER setting with pediatric
patients on in the ICU setting for refractory
seizures. - Still may be useful in adults who are seizing
because of phenobarbital withdrawal. - Be prepared to intubate and support blood
pressure. - Propofol and phenobarbital are acceptable options
for treating refractory seizures in ICU setting. - Get help from a neurologist if you are in the
ICU.
30Back to Clinical Evaluation
- When the environment is more calm, do a complete
history and physical exam - Spend time on a thorough neurological exam
- Correct any suspected underlying causes
31Back to Clinical Evaluation
- Laboratory Data
- Chem 7, Ca, Mg, CBC with differential, toxicology
screens - Drug levels if patient is on an anticonvulsant.
- EEG
- More than 50 of patients with epilepsy have
normal EEG. - Consider sleep-deprived EEG if resting EEG is
normal and suspicion is still high.
32Back to Clinical Evaluation
- MRI
- Head CT can be used if suspect mass lesion,
hemorrhage, or large stroke. Also used if MRI is
contraindicated. - Consider
- Lumbar pucture
- Holter monitoring and/or other cardiac evaluation
- Neurology consult
33Back to C. Brown
- Physical exam was normal.
- Chem 7, Ca, Mg, CBC with differential, toxicology
screens were done. Positive for cannibanoids. - Resting EEG was normal.
- Telemetry monitoring normal.
- Echocardiogram and carotid Doppler duplex normal.
- Follow up with me as outpatient.
34Back to C. Brown
- Neurology referral made.
- Made it clear to patient that he cannot drive,
swim, take a bath, or operate heavy equipment. - Several days later, received call that had two
more similar episodes witnessed by mother. - Phone interviewed mothervirtually identical
behavior, BUT she notes a more postictal state
confused for several minutes after event.
35Back to C. Brown
- Scheduled outpatient MRI and outpatient sleep
deprived EEG. - Curbsided neurologist to see if medication needed
to be started.
36Seizure Management - Medication
- When to start medication? Definitely start if
- there is a structural lesion, such as tumor, AV
malformation, infection - EEG with a definite epileptic pattern
- history of brain injury or stroke, CNS infection,
significant head trauma - Todds postictal paresis
- Status epilepticus on presentation
- Otherwise, get neurology consult.
37Seizure Management - Medication
- Most common medications used are phenytoin,
valproate, and carbamazepine. - Each neurologist seems to have his/her drug of
preference. - For absence seizure, ethosuximide is clearly the
drug of choice.
38Seizure Management - Medication
- Although not proven in controlled studies, it is
still believed that monotherapy is advantageous. - Can use Swedish Online Pharmacology or Epocrates
to establish dosing, side effects, and monitoring
guidelines. - As always, be aware of drug-drug interactions,
metabolism in the elderly, and non-compliance due
to side effects.
39Seizure Management - Medication
- Monitoring AED levels most helpful when patient
is doing well and when s/he is symptomatic. - Generally, at the outset need to monitor
regularly consider weekly. Once benchmark
blood level obtained, can then monitor annually
as long as no breakthrough seizures.
40Seizure Management - Medication
- Stopping medication should be weighed against
newer studies showing 20-30 recurrence. General
rule of thumb has been seizure free for 2 years.
- If stopping medication, must be a slow taper over
months.
41Seizure Management - Medication
- NEW MEDICATION
- Felbamate
- Gabapentin
- Lamotrigine
- Topiramate
- Tiagabine
- Levetiracetam
- Oxcarbazepine
- Zonisamide
42Seizure Management Nonpharmacologic
- Vagus Nerve Stimulation
- Epilepsy Surgery
43Back to C. Brown
- Spoke with neurologists partner who agreed with
outpatient workup and starting patient on ½
maintenance dose of valproate (usual maintenance
dose is 15 mg/kg/d).
44Back to C. Brown
- Charlie sees the neurologist, has had another two
brief lt 5 second episodes in the interim, this
time just with drooling. Confused? - However, Charlie tells the neurologist that he
NEVER had a postictal state. - Neurologist thinks he needs a cardiac workup and
recommends a colleague.
45Back to C. Brown
- Curbsided cardiologist who is very confused
- In the meantime, get MRI results back. There is
a linear area of increased signal in
periventricular white matter of the left temporal
lobe suggestive of old ischemia or gliosis.
46Back to C. Brown
- Mother reports to neurologist her sons previous
episodes and confirms that there was a postictal
period. - Neurologist calls me back telling me he will see
Charlie again and this time probably start him on
medication. - Cheers all the way around for the team effort!