Status epilepticus
From IDWiki
Definition
- Continuous seizure activity lasting 30 minutes or more OR two or more sequential seizures without full recovery of consciousness between, lasting more than 30 minutes
Classification
- Convulsive versus non-convulsive
Pathophysiology
- Failure of the normal inhibitory mechanisms in the brain
- Repeated seizures can trigger internalization of the post-synaptic GABA receptors
Differential Diagnosis
- Same as for seizure
Investigations
- Same as for seizure
- MR head
- May see changes related to the area of seizure
- May resolve if patient survives
Management
- Emergent, same as for seizure
- ABCs
- Positioning to prevent aspiration, suffocation, and physical injury
- Oral or nasal airway if possible, if prolonged
- Oxygen
- Cardiac, BP, and temperature monitoring
- IV line, send bloodwork
- CBC, lytes, BUN, Cr, glucose, tox screen, antiepileptic drug levels
- STAT capillary glucose
- Treat medically if lasts longer than five minutes or two seizures without return to baseline
- First, treat with benzodiazepine
- Prefer intravenous to intramuscular
- Midazolam 10mg IM or buccal
- Lorazepam 4mg IV
- Diazepam 10mg IV
- Repeat in 10minutes
- If benzodiazepines fail, step up to phenytoin
- Phenytoin 15-20mg/kg given at 50mg/min (~1g for an adult)
- Can cause hypotension, cardiac arrhythmias, and purple glove syndrome if given too quickly
- If phenytoin fails, transfer to ICU
- May require more drugs
- Propafol infusion
- Midazolam infusion
- Phenobarbitolf
- May require intubation
- May require continuous EEG monitoring
- May progress to non-convulsive status epilepticus
- May require paralysis for intubation
- Can use to monitor medication effects
- Can identify if seizures are focal
- May require more drugs
- Investigations
- Labs, EEG, CT or MRI as per seizures
- First, treat with benzodiazepine
- Late management
- EEG to ensure not in non-convulsive status epilepticus
- Be careful discontinuing the medication that terminated the seizures, as this may trigger recurrence
Complications
- Cerebral injury due to excitotoxcity after 30 minutes
- Hypoglycemia
- Hyperkalemia
- Hyponatremia
- Lactic acidosis leading to hypercapnia
- Hyperthermia
- Cerebral edema
- Neurogenic pulmonary edema
- Rhabdomyolysis and resulting AKI
- Arrhythmias
- Mortality (20%), related to underlying cause