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Status epilepticus Rashid Alshahoumi Oct 8th 2008 Outline • Introduction • Definition • pathophysiology • Etiology • Classification • Diagnosis • Management • Take home messages • Discussion/Questions Introduction • Status epilepticus (SE) is a medical & neurologic emergency. • An under-recognized health problem associated with substantial morbidity & mortality. • Successful therapeutic intervention essential to efficiently identify & treat patients in SE Frequency • An estimated 152,000 cases /yr in the US, resulting in 42,000 deaths & an inpatient cost of $3.8 to $7 billion/yr. • Sex :. ♀ = ♂ • Age : all age groups but more → extremes of age. In the neonatal group, SE may be related to perinatal hypoxic insults or metabolic disorders. Elderly persons have an ↑ incidence of SE secondary to ischemic CNS insults Epidemiology • SE of partial onset accounts for the majority of episodes. • One study on SE found that 69 % of episodes in adults & 64 % of episodes in children were partial onset, followed by secondarily generalized SE in 43% of adults and 36 % of children. • SE occur in 1st yr and after 60 yrs. • Adults > 60 yrs had the highest risk with an incidence of 86/100,000/ year. • Children ≤ 15 yrs, infants < 12 mths had the highest incidence and frequency of SE. Mortality/Morbidity The mortality rate (defined as death within 30 days) was 22 % in the Richmond study. The mortality rate among children was only 3% & adults was 26%. Elderly population → highest rate of mortality at 38%. Etiology : damage to CNS caused by acute insult precipitating the SE. Systemic stress : alterations from the persistent seizure activity. Excitotoxic injury : injury from repetitive epileptic discharges. Iatrogenic : injury from treatment The primary determinants of mortality were duration of seizures, age at onset & etiology. Anoxia and stroke : very high mortality rate. Alcohol withdrawal or low levels of antiepileptic : relatively low mortality rate. Nonfatal cases : significant morbidity. Definitions • Exact definitions vary. • It is essentially an acute, prolonged epileptic crisis. • The brain is in a state of persistent seizure • In 1981, the International League against Epilepsy defined SE as a seizure that “ Persists for a sufficient length of time or is repeated frequently enough that recovery between attacks does not occur". ?? lack of a specific duration → definition difficult to use. • In early studies, SE was defined by its duration as continuous seizures occurring for > 1 hour. • Clinical & animal experiences later showed that pathologic changes and prognostic implications occurred when SE persisted for 30 minutes.→ the time for the definition was shortened. • Isolated tonic–clonic seizures in adults rarely last more than a few minutes • The need to begin therapy for SE before 30 minutes • Evidence that 5 minutes is sufficient to damage neurons & seizures are unlikely to self-terminate by that time. An operational definition of status epilepticus Either continuous seizures lasting at least 5 minutes or ≥ 2 discrete seizures between which there is incomplete recovery of consciousness This definition differs from that of serial seizures. ≥ 2 seizures occurring over a relatively brief period (minutes to hours), but with the patient regaining consciousness between the seizures. Different in adults and pediatrics? Shinnar et al. analyzed the duration of new-onset seizure activity in 407 children → seizures lasting > 5-10 minutes were unlikely to stop spontaneously & should be treated . The term status epilepticus may be used to describe any continuing type of seizure. Pathophysiology In normal brain, excitatory & inhibitory mechanisms are in balance. Glutamate is the main excitatory neurotransmitter. Gamma aminobutyric acid (GABA) is the main inhibitory neurotransmitter. The number and distribution of neurotransmitters & receptors varies in different areas of the brain, as does the connectivity of the neurons.e.g.the temporal& frontal lobes are more epileptogenic than the parietal or occipital lobes. Failure of mechanisms that normally abort an isolated seizure. This failure can arise from abnormally persistent, excessive excitation or ineffective recruitment of inhibition. The relative contributions of these factors are poorly understood?! Failure of inhibitory processes : the major mechanism ? It is likely that numerous mechanisms are involved, depending on the underlying cause. An exogenous toxin : e.g. the ingestion in 1987 of mussels contaminated with domoic acid, an analogue of glutamate → Some patients had prolonged & profound SE. This occurrence suggests that excessive activation of excitatory amino acid receptors can cause prolonged seizures and excitatory amino acids have a causative role in SE. SE can also be caused by penicillin & related compounds that antagonize the effects of GABA. Recent studies suggest that the failure of inhibition may be due in some cases to a shift in the functional properties of the GABA receptor that occurs as seizures become prolonged. This damage is partly a consequence of glutamatemediated excitotoxicity & does not appear to be due primarily to an excessive metabolic demand imposed by repetitive neuronal firing. The superimposition of systemic stresses e.g. hyperthermia, hypoxia, or hypotension ↑↑↑ degree of neuronal injury . The most vulnerable areas include the limbic system, cerebellum, middle cortical area & thalamus. Many of the systemic responses e.g. hypertension, tachycardia, cardiac arrhythmias, and hyperglycemia are thought to result from the catecholamine surge that accompanies the seizures. Body temp may ↑ following the vigorous muscle activity that accompanies GCSE . Lactic acidosis is common after a single generalized motor seizure & resolves with termination of the seizure. Cerebral metabolic demand increases greatly with GCSE; however, cerebral blood flow & oxygenation are thought to be preserved or even ↑ early in the course of GCSE. Etiology : damage to CNS caused by acute insult precipitating the SE. Systemic stress :alterations from the persistent seizure activity Excitotoxic injury : injury from repetitive epileptic discharges Iatrogenic : injury from treatment Lungs Due to both metabolic and respiratory acidosis, the pH of ABG is often found to be below normal in SE. Heart The sympathetic overdrive can cause tachycardia. Muscle : As a result of continued seizure activity, conversion to anaerobic metabolism contributes to lactic acidosis . Blood chemistries: De-margination of neutrophils occurs with the stress of seizing Vital signs BP TEMP RR The initial phase of SE results in ↑ BP with ↑ in peripheral vascular resistance . As the seizure progresses, the body's core temp↑ The patient in SE often has a transient change in RR & tidal volume As the status becomes prolonged, the BP will normalize or even begin to fall with resultant hypotension. 2 distinct phases with specific neurophysiological changes occur during the progression of GCSE. In phase I : The increased metabolic requirements of abnormally discharging neurons are adequately met. The increased cerebral activity results in a coupled ↑ in CBF & ↑ in autonomic activity. The later results in tachycardia, hypertension and an increase in blood glucose levels. After about 30 minutes of seizure activity, the compensatory mechanisms that have maintained adequate cerebral perfusion begin to fail. This stage (phase II) is characterized by a failure of cerebral autoregulation, ↑ICP systemic hypotension, hypoglycaemia, ↑ systemic & IC lactate levels. When this occurs, cerebral O2 requirements exceed supply & electromechanical dissociation occurs in which cerebral seizure activity may be accompanied by minimal visible muscular twitching. The degree of brain damage increases markedly as decompensation occurs. General tonic–clonic convulsions predominate initially, changing to myoclonus, then complete cessation of clinical seizure activity (electromechanical dissociation). Ongoing EEG seizures are replaced by periodic epileptic discharges (PEDs), and then generally slowed background activity . Causes of SE Many patients who present in convulsive SE do not have a history of seizures. In people with known epilepsy, the most common cause is a change in medication; noncompliance or discontinuation. Some of the more common predisposing factors include: Withdrawal syndromes Acute structural injury Remote or longstanding structural injury Metabolic abnormalities Use of, or overdose with drugs that lower the seizure threshold Chronic epilepsy; SE may represent part of a patient's underlying epileptic syndrome Age significantly affects etiology of SE In patients < 16 years, the most common cause was fever and/or infection (36%); in contrast, this accounted for only 5% in adults (DeLorenzo, 1995). The same study revealed that the most common precipitant in adults was cerebrovascular disease (25%), whereas this factor caused only 3% of pediatric cases. In a more refined study that focused on children, Shinnar et al (1997) found that more than 80% of children < 2 years had SE of febrile or acute symptomatic origin, whereas cryptogenic &remote symptomatic causes were more common in older children. Clinical manifestations & Classification The classification systems used for SE are discrepant throughout the literature. Many schemes have been generated that rely on both clinical and electrographic findings. Rona and Luders (2005) have suggested a detailed semiologic classification along 3 axes: (1) The type of brain function predominantly compromised (2) The body part involved (3) The evolution over time. Celesia (1976) & Treiman (1994) proposed simpler schemes. Various approaches to classifying SE have been suggested Classification 1 Classification 2 • Generalized (tonic-clonic, myoclonic, absence, atonic, akinetic) • Generalized SE Classifying SE by (overt or subtle) life stage : • Partial (simple or complex) SE. • Nonconvulsive SE (simple partial, complex partial, absence). Classification 3 •Neonatal period • Infancy and childhood • Childhood and adulthood •Adulthood only • It is important to note that almost all seizure types may become prolonged, fulfilling the definition of SE • So as there are many types of epileptic seizures, there are many forms of SE. • The simplest classification is convulsive versus nonconvulsive, but a description of syndromes based on generalized or partial (focal) onset of seizures provides more insight into pathophysiology and clinical management. Generalized • Generalized tonic-clonic "Grand mal" :may be secondarily generalized from a focus • Absence : "Petit mal" • Myoclonic : primary or secondary • Tonic : Pediatric, often with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome • Atonic/akinetic : Pediatric; often with LennoxGastaut syndrome • Clonic : Infants Partial (focal) onset Simple partial : • Motor : epilepsia partialis continua • Sensory : rare or rarely diagnosed • Autonomic : rare or rarely diagnosed • Psychic : fear, emotional content • Aphasic Complex partial : • Includes impairment of consciousness Special types • Neonatal/pediatric: Includes electrographic SE of sleep, infantile spasms • "Subtle" status Stages of Status Epilepticus • Premonitory (Prodromal) Stage: Increasing seizure frequency, myoclonus, confusion Early stage: Continuous Seizures • Late or established stage: > 30 minutes • Refractory Stage: > 60 to 90 minutes, with Persistence despite adequate AED therapy Diagnosis Convulsive SE is rarely a diagnostic difficulty, but nonconvulsive forms may be difficult to recognize or missed Differential diagnosis of SE : With prominent motor abnormalities • Movement disorders (myoclonus, tremors, chorea, tics, dystonic reactions) • Structural disease (decerebrate, decorticate posturing) • Psychiatric disorders (pseudoseizure/conversion, acute psychosis) Usually "nonconvulsive" • Epilepsy-related disorders (postictal state, periodic lateralized epileptiform discharges with acute structural lesions) • Acute encephalopathies (toxic, metabolic e.g, hypoglycemia, organ failure, delirium related to drugs, alcohol, or infection) • Psychiatric disorders (catatonia, acute psychosis) • Sleep disorders (narcolepsy, cataplexy, parasomnias) • Syncope (cardiac, vagal, hypovolemic; medication toxicity) • Vascular disease (strokes, transient ischemic attacks) • Head injury (stupor, coma, amnesia) • Transient global amnesia (usually clears quickly; rare recurrence) Nonepileptic seizures : "pseudoseizures" or "pseudo status“ : troublesome. These episodes often occur in patients who also have epileptic seizures. Features that suggest nonepileptic spells include: • Out-of-phase limb movements • Complicated vocalizations • Forced eye closure during the event with resistance to eye opening, eyes are usually open during both partial and tonic clonic seizures • Tearfulness or sobbing during or after the seizures • Absence of epileptiform features on the EEG during spells and quick return of normal background following termination of the spells. (Epileptic seizures cannot be totally excluded because the surface EEG may be unaffected by some epileptic seizures, especially in the frontal lobe History and physical • The patient's history often reveals the cause of a patient's SE. • Factors such as trauma, drug overdose, alcohol use, medical illness, stroke, or epilepsy may be uncovered through discussions with the patient's family members and companions or the patient's medical bracelet and personal possessions. • Physical examination focuses on the ascertaining the underlying cause of SE, localizing the neurologic abnormality & determining whether complications have occurred. • Vital signs are crucial given the cardiovascular complications. • Signs of infection ( fever, nuchal rigidity, or skin lesions) or systemic illness, such as kidney or liver disease. • Signs of head injury or coagulopathy are also important. • The neurologic examination also assesses whether seizures are actually continuing in subtle ways. Laboratory Studies Search for metabolic abnormalities, particularly of Na, Cal, Mg, and glucose Kidney, liver, and coagulation assays Pregnancy test for women of childbearing age (partially for purposes of counseling about effects and implications) Assessment for eclampsia in pregnancy Urgent CT scans in cases with asymmetric neurologic exam, seizures with a focal origin, or head injury LP, if there is any suggestion of CNS infection or when SE is of unknown cause or difficult to control Toxicology screening Anticonvulsant levels & arterial oxygen tension (but treatment must begin before these levels are known) Blood gas and prolactin levels (to check for the possibility of pseudoseizures) EEG • Generalized convulsive SE is diagnosed without an EEG & treatment begins without it. • An EEG is necessary for the diagnosis of nonconvulsive SE, although treatment may begin based on clinical suspicion. • EEGs are mandatory when a patient does not respond to initial treatment Tonic-clonic seizures Generalised spike-wave activity, paroxysmal fast activity Tonic-Clonic Status Myoclonic seizures Generalised polyspikes or polyspike and wave activity Myoclonic Status Simple Partial SE Periodic Epileptic Discharges in Anoxic Brain Injury OUTLINE/Management of SE • General approach • Anti - Epileptic Drugs: – Benzodiazepines – Phenytoin / Fosphenytoin – Barbiturates – Propofol – others / new possibilities Management of SE ABC’s (+ monitor / O2 / large IV’s) START PHARMACOTHERAPY ASAP Metabolic acidosis common - if severe, give Bicarb Beware hyperthermia 2º sz - in 30-80% → passive cooling Management of SE Consider Infection continued underlying causes: (systemic / CNS) Structural: trauma, CVA, IC bleed CNS malformations Metabolic - hypoxia, abn electrolytes, hypoglycemia Toxic - alcohol, other drugs Drug withdrawal - AED’s, benzos Congenital - inborn errors of metabolism Management of SE History continued & Physical - do once treatment initiated Hx: events, trauma, meds, sz hx, ETOH, infection P/E: Neuro - look for focal signs vs. generalized tonic-clonic look for signs of underlying causes - trauma,infection, etc LAB: gluc, lytes, creat, BUN, CBC, Ca, Mg, Phos, LFT’s, AED levels, ETOH / toxicology, PTT / INR - ABG Consider.... Thiamine Glucose Pyridoxine 5 gm IV (70 mg/kg kids) – Reverses INH action inhibiting GABA synthesis Anti - Epileptic Drugs: – Benzodiazepines – Phenytoin / Fosphenytoin – Barbiturates – Propofol – others / new possibilities Drug Rx of SE Starting Rx ASAP has been correlated with a better response rate to drug Rx & lower morbidity Drug Rx of SE Ideal agent characteristics: – Easy to administer – Prompt onset, long-acting – 100% effective vs seizures – No depression of cardio-resp function or mental status – No other adverse effects – DREAM TICKET ! Drug Rx of SE Existing agents - adverse effects: – Benzos / Bbts - decrease LOC / respiration – Dilantin / (Fosphenytoin) - infusion rate-related hypotension / dysrhythmias – Dilantin / Bbts / (Fosphen) - slow onset due to limited rate of administration Drug Rx of SE 1st - Benzodiazepines ( Lorazepam, Diazepam ) 2nd - Phenytoin, Fosphenytoin 3rd - Phenobarbital Drug Rx - Refractory SE Anesthetic doses of: – Midazolam (0.2 mg/kg slow IV bolus) - >continuous IV infusion @ .4 - 6.0 mcg/kg/min OR .1 - 2.0 mg/kg/hr – Propofol (1-2 mg/kg) – Barbiturates (Thiopental, Phenobarbital, Pentobarbital) – Inhalational anesthetics (Isoflurane) GA can suppress immune system ->infection If NO IV line ( out of hospital -- often in children) → – Midazolam IM (or Intranasal) 0.15-0.3 mg/kg – Diazepam Rectally 0.5 mg/kg (to 20 mg) – Lorazepam SL 0 .1 mg /kg Lorazepam 1st agent to use Dose: Adults 4 -10 mg (.1 mg/kg) IV Peds .05 - .1 mg/kg (to 4 mg) IV S/E: resp depression, hypotension, confusion, sedation (but less than diazepam) Diazepam Dose: Peds .1-1.0 (.2-.5) mg/kg IV Adults 10 - 20 mg (.2 mg/kg) IV Lorazepam vs. Diazepam Duration of action Onset of action Sedation Lorazepam Diazepam *12-24 hr *< 1 hr 2-3 min 1-3 min + ++ Midazolam Dose: .2 mg/kg IV 5-10 mg IM 0.2 mg/kg Intranasal Dose for refractory SE - continuous IV infusion @ .1 - 2.0 mg/kg/hr – titrated Onset: IV 2 - 3 min / other routes 15 min Duration: 1 - 4 hr Phenytoin (Dilantin) Still the standard 2nd IV Rx after Benzo Dose: 20 mg/kg IV solution is highly alkaline - dissolved in propylene glycol, alcohol, and NaOH - pH is 12-give in large vein, dilute N/S, flush Rate: 50 mg / min (Peds: 1 mg/kg/min) Onset of action: 10 - 30 min Duration of action: 12 - 24 hr Phenytoin continued S/E : Hypotension Arrhythmias - (must monitor) Respiratory depression Venous irritation Extravasation → tissue injury / necrosis Purple Glove Syndrome Progressive limb edema, discoloration and pain 2-12 hr post IV admin Fosphenytoin A prodrug of Phenytoin It has no anticonvulsant action itself, but is rapidly converted to Phenytoin Dosage: in “Phenytoin Equivalents” to attempt to avoid confusion Fosphenytoin Advantages over Phenytoin: PH 8 (vs Phenytoin pH 12) Does not require solvent (Phenytoin is dissolved in propylene glycol) can give IM when no IV access IV: less potential for irritation - can give faster Lower risk of hypotension and dysrhythmias No risk of tissue necrosis Does not precipitate in IV solutions Fosphenytoin Negative considerations: COST Approx 20x that of Phenytoin CONFUSION of ordering in “Phenytoin equivalents” can give IV at rate of 150 PE/min, which delivers 100 mg/min of Phenytoin 750 mg Fosphen = 500 mg PE Fosphenytoin Minor S/E similar to Phenytoin (since is converted to Phenytoin): Nystagmus, dizziness, headache, somnolence, ataxia; MORE pruritus & paraesthesias, esp in groin area - responds to Benadryl Despite giving more rapidly, not shown to have more rapid onset of action Barbiturates In use since 1912 General CNS depressant activity raise threshold of most neuronal pathways to direct and indirect stimulation at high levels, slows EEG --> burst suppression and ultimately electrocortical silence mechanism of action not clearly defined S/E: resp depression, hypotension Phenobarbital Dose: 20 mg/kg IV - maximum 1 gm Maximum rate: 100 mg/min Onset of action: 10 - 20 min Duration of action: 1 - 3 days Phenobarbital IV Phenobarb in Refractory SE: Because of profound hypotension & respiratory depression, patient will likely need intubation & ventilation at this point; (and will need ICU admission and continuous EEG monitoring if SE persists) Pentobarbital Dose: 5 - 12 mg/kg Rate: 5 - 20 mg/min once SE resolved -maintenance: 1-10 mg/kg/hr Propofol Dose: 1-2 (3-5) mg/kg Rate: 5-10 mg/min (1-15 mg/kg/hr) Onset: 2-4 min Half-life: 30-60 min Does not accumulate --> rapid recovery Mechanism: stimulates GABA receptors (like Benzos/Bbts) suppresses CNS metabolism Propofol Advantages over Barbiturates Less hypotension More rapid onset of action Rapid elimination Other possible drugs for Status Lidocaine - Valproate Gabapentin / Vigabatrin / Lamotrigine Felbamate - blocks NMDA receptors Ketamine - blocks NMDA receptors Ketamine in SE Blocks NMDA receptors - this may protect brain from effects of excitatory NT’s May be neuroprotective as well as antiepileptic Take home Messages There is a better outcome if sz stopped earlier Several medications are widely used for the treatment of SE. no medication is generally accepted as best in all circumstances. There are many possible approaches to the treatment of SE. Remember 1st line anticonvulsants : Lorazepam diazepam, Phenytoin SE that is refractory to first line anticonvulsants indicates a grave prognosis and requires management in an intensive care setting The primary drugs used for refractory SE are phenobarbital, pentobarbital, midazolam & propofol. References Practice parameter: diagnostic assessment of the child with status epilepticus (an evidence-based review): report of the Quality Standards Subcommittee of the American Academy of Neurology and the Practice Committee of the Child Neurology Society. Neurology. 2006 Nov 14;67(9):1542-50. Review Status epilepticus: pathophysiology and management in adults Lancet Neurol. 2006 Mar;5(3):246-56 Advances in the management of seizures and status epilepticus in critically ill patients Crit Care Clin. 2006 Oct;22(4):637-59 Intensive Care Med 2002; 17; 174 Simon J. Parsons, Katarina Tomas and Peter Cox Outcome of Pediatric Status Epilepticus Admitted to Intensive Care Shinnar S, Pellock JM, Moshe SL, et al. In whom does status epilepticus occur: age-related differences in children. Epilepsia. Aug 1997;38(8):90714 Treiman DM, Meyers PD, Walton NY, Collins JF, Colling C, Rowan AJ, et al. A comparison of four treatments for generalized convulsive status epilepticus. Veterans Affairs Status Epilepticus Cooperative Study Group. N Engl J Med. Sep 17 1998;339(12):792-