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Seizures and other such Spells 27th Annual Family Medicine Review Austin, Texas APRIL 2011 Jeffrey Clark, D.O. things that come and go Spells • SZ • Migraine • TIA/Syncope Hypoglycemia Intoxication Psychiatric (spells) Narcolepsy BPPV The Significance of Syncope The only difference between syncope and sudden death is that in one you wake up.1 1 Engel GL. Psychologic stress, vasodepressor syncope, and sudden death. Ann Intern Med 1978; 89: 403-412. Neurally-mediated syncope Absence of cardiological disease Long history of syncope After sudden unexpected unpleasant sight, sound, smell or pain Prolonged standing or crowded, hot places Nausea, vomiting associated with syncope During the meal or in the absorptive state after a meal With head rotation, pressure on carotid sinus (as in tumors, shaving, tight collars) After exertion Syncope due to orthostatic hypotension After standing up Temporal relationship with start of medication leading to hypotension or changes of dosage Prolonged standing especially in crowded, hot places Presence of autonomic neuropathy or Parkinsonism After exertion Cardiac syncope Presence of definite structural heart disease During exertion, or supine Preceded by palpitation Family history of sudden death Cerebrovascular syncope With arm exercise Differences in blood pressure or pulse in the two arms The Significance of Syncope • Some causes of syncope are potentially fatal • Cardiac causes of syncope have the highest mortality rates Syncope Mortality 25% 20% 15% 10% 5% 0% Overall 1 Day SC, et al. Am J of Med 1982;73:15-23. Kapoor W. Medicine 1990;69:160-175. 3 Silverstein M, Sager D, Mulley A. JAMA. 1982;248:1185-1189. 4 Martin G, Adams S, Martin H. Ann Emerg Med. 1984;13:499-504. 2 Due to Cardiac Causes Structural Cardiac Abnormalities • Hx of MI / Ischemic injury • CHF / decreased EF • Valvular abnormalities • Outflow obstruction • Wall motion abn. Cardiac Rhythm Abnormalities Bradycardia • Sick sinus • AV block Tachycardia • VT • SVT Long QT Syndrome Test/Procedure Yield based on mean time to diagnosis of 5.1 months7 History and Physical (including carotid sinus massage) ECG 49-85% 1, 2 2-11% 2 Electrophysiology Study without SHD* 11% 3 Electrophysiology Study with SHD 49% 3 Tilt Table Test (without SHD) 11-87% 4, 5 Ambulatory ECG Monitors: • Holter 2% • External Loop Recorder (2-3 weeks duration) 20% 7 • Insertable Loop Recorder (up to 14 months duration) Neurological † (Head CT Scan, Carotid Doppler) 1 Kapoor, et al N Eng J Med, 1983. 2 Kapoor, Am J Med, 1991. 3 Linzer, et al. Ann Int. Med, 1997. 4 Kapoor, Medicine, 1990. 7 65-88% 6, 7 0-4% 4,5,8,9,10 9 Day S, et al. Am J Med. 1982; 73: 15-23. Kapoor, JAMA, 1992 10 Stetson P, et al. PACE. 1999; 22 (part II): 782. Krahn, Circulation, 1995 7 Krahn, Cardiology Clinics, 1997. 8 Eagle K,, et al. The Yale J Biol and Medicine. 1983; 56: 1-8. 5 6 * † Structural Heart Disease MRI not studied Subclavian Stenosis Subclavian Stenosis (a) aortogram (b) Delayed Image Arch aortogram initially shows apparent absence of left vertebral artery . However, delayed imaging on the same patient, the left vertebral artery (green) fills retrogradely to supply the left subclavian artery, (confirming left subclavian steal phenomenon secondary to a severe stenosis of the proximal left subclavian artery) Your Patient • 21 year old college student who “keeps blacking out without seizure activity”… • Evaluated in the ED this afternoon, phenytoin (Dilantin) level is “normal”... • What other tests do you want?… • What are these spells (? Seizures ?) • If so, what type of seizure is it (? And, does it matter ?) • How do you know they are not in status epilepticus? • What should your evaluation include? • How does the AED level help direct your plan? •What will you do if seizures continue in spite of management? Will it happen again? (risk of recurrence) If it does… Seizures: Focal vs. Generalized Onset Generalized Onset Focal Onset (primarily generalized) (partial onset) • Absence • Atonic • Myoclonic • Generalized tonic-clonic • Partial motor • Partial sensory • Complex partial • Generalized tonic clonic Epilepsy syndromes • Juvenile myoclonic epilepsy • Benign neonatal familial convulsions • Childhood & Juvenile absence • Febrile seizures • West syndrome • Lennox-Gastaut syndrome • Rolandic epilepsy • Warning (aura) Complex Partial Often • Duration 30-120 sec • Occur (#) 1-3/day • Automatisms Often Occas. Partially Totally • Post-ictal (tired) YES no • Focal abn (ex or scan) Often • Amnestic (for spell) • Family hx no Absence no 10-20 sec 10-20/day no YES • • • • • Phenobarbital (1912) Dilantin (1938) Ethosuximide (1955) Tegretol (1974) Valproate (1978) Vagus Nerve Stimulator (1997) • • • • • • • • • • • Neurontin (1993) Felbatol (1993) Lamictal (1994) Topamax (1996) Gabitril (1997) Keppra (1999) Trileptal (2000) Zonegran (2000) Lyrica (2004) Vimpat (2008) Sabril (2009) Sz free first drug 47 % First Drug Tried 36 % Not Controlled Sz free 2nd drug Sz free 3rd or mult. drugs Not sz free 4% 13 % Second Drug Success of AEDs in Previously Untreated Epilepsy Pts. (470) NEJM 2000;342:314-319. Kwan P, Brodie MJ. Dilantin dose increased from 400 to 500 per day What you should now know: • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • SPELLS of… Vision, consciousness, weakness, etc… Avoid terms such as “Blacking Out”, “Passing Out”, “Fell Out” Syncope definition, evaluation, prognosis Epilepsy, Tx & eval of epilepsy, Control of epilepsy “Normal” AED Level Therapeutic AED level Toxic Level “Post-ictal” “Petit Mal” (Absence) sz Convulsive syncope Tussive Syncope & Micturation Syncope “Hypoglycemia” spells “Drop Attacks” due to “V-B Insufficiency” or “Subclavian Steal” Carotid dz (? Causing syncope/spells with LOC) Bank Robberies and other complex activity during seizures or somnambulism