Status epilepticus (peds): Difference between revisions
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{{Initial management of pediatric status epilepticus}} | |||
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Revision as of 15:32, 13 December 2022
This page is for pediatric patients. For adult patients, see: Status epilepticus.
Background
For a child over 1 month of age
- Categorized as convulsive or non-convulsive
- Convulsive status epilepticus: tonic-clonic movements with altered mental status, may have focal neuro deficits post-ictally (Todd's paralysis)
- Non-convulsive status epilepticus: seizure activity on EEG without clinical findings
- Status epilepticus is a medical emergency and has a high rate of morbidity and mortality
- Can lead to Cardiac dysrhythmia, Hypoxia, Metabolic abnormalities, Acidosis, Altered autonomic function, Rhabdomyolysis, Neurogenic pulmonary edema, Pulmonary aspiration, Hyperthermia, Permanent neurological damage
Clinical Features
- Unresponsive patient with either:
- Seizure >5 min and/or ongoing seizure on presentation
- 2 or more seizures without full recovery of consciousness between seizures
Differential Diagnosis
For the Neonate
- CNS: Perinatal asphyxia, intracranial hemorrhage, hydrocephalus
- Metabolic: Electrolytes (↓ Na, ↓ Glucose, ↓ Ca++), Pyridoxine dependence, inborn errors of metabolism, mitochondrial disorders
- Infection: Meningitis/Encephalitis, TORCH infections (Toxoplasmosis, Other (syphilis, varicella-zoster, parvovirus B19), Rubella, Cytomegalovirus, and Herpes))
For the Pediatric Patient
- Fever, severe infection (meningitis, encephalitis)
- Anoxic injury
- Electrolyte derangements
- Hyper or hypoglycemia
- Hyper or hyponatremia
- Hyper or hypocalcemia
- Traumatic brain injury (TBI)
- Anti-epileptic drug (AED) non-adherence, overdose, withdrawal
- Toxic exposure (PLASTIC mnemonic)
- P: Pesticides, Propranolol, Phencyclidine (PCP)
- L: Lead, Lithium, Lidocaine, Lindane
- A: Alcohols, Amphetamines
- S: Sugar (hypoglycemics), Salicyclates, Sympathomimetics
- T: Tricyclic antidepressants, Theophylline
- I: Isoniazid, Iron, Insulin
- C: Cocaine, Camphor, Caffeine
- Structural abnormality of the brain
- Hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE)
- Neurodegenerative disorder
- Stroke
- Genetic condition
Consider other causes of Pediatric seizure
Evaluation
Workup
- Check a blood glucose
- Consider an electrolyte panel, a blood gas, CBC, calcium level, LFTs
- If appropriate collect anticonvulsant drug levels
- Consider blood & urine culture
- Consider head imaging if concern for blood, infectious process, mass
- Consider lumbar puncture if febrile, concerns for meningitis/encephalitis (may be afebrile), or localized/focal neurological findings
- Consider toxicology studies
- Consider EKG to evaluate for arrhythmias, toxins and electrolyte abnormalities
Management
Prehospital
- Give Midazolam 0.2 mg/kg/dose IM/intranasal (MAX 10 mg/dose)
- Check blood glucose
- If blood glucose <3.3 mmol/L (<60 mg/dL): Treat with D25W 2 mL/kg/dose IV (MAX 100 mL/dose) OR D10W 5 mL/kg/dose IV (MAX 250 mL/dose).
- If ≥3.3 mmol/L (≥60 mg/dL): Give second dose of Midazolam 0.2 mg/kg/dose IM/intranasal (MAX cumulative dose of 10 mg in prehospital setting; if max dose given, consult Medical Director/Base Hospital for next step).
Emergency Department
Initial management of pediatric status epilepticus
| Timeline | General Considerations | Seizure Treatment |
| 0-5 minutes |
|
|
| 5-10 minutes |
|
|
| 10-15 minutes |
|
|
| 15-30 minutes |
|
|
| >30 minutes |
|
|
^May be ineffective for toxin-induced seizures and contraindicated in cocaine toxicity
Pediatric Anticonvulsants Table
| Drug | Dose | Infusion Rate (Minutes) | Age | Comments/Cautions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Levetiracetam |
|
≥5 | Any | Most commonly used agent |
| Fosphenytoin |
|
≥10 | Any | Choose alternate drug if on phenytoin at home; may decrease BP/HR; not for toxin-induced seizures |
| Valproic acid |
|
≥10 | ≥2 years | Caution in patients with liver dysfunction, mitochondrial disease, urea disorder, thrombocytopenia, or unexplained developmental delay |
| Phenytoin |
|
≥20 | Any | Choose alternate drug if on phenytoin at home; may decrease BP/HR; not for toxin-induced seizures |
| Phenobarbital |
|
≥20 | <6 months | First line for most neonatal seizures. Respiratory depression, especially in combination with benzodiazepines |
Disposition
- Criteria for admission
- Patients with refractory seizures
- Patients who are not responsive within 4-6 hours of arrival to the ED
- Criteria for discharge
- Patients who have returned to baseline post seizure management
- Patients whose parents/guardians feel comfortable with discharge and have been counseled about what to do if seizure recurs
See Also
- Seizure (peds)
- Status epilepticus (adult)
External Links
References
- EIIC-TREKK Bottom Line Recommendations Pediatric Status Epilepticus. April 2022, TREKK; EIIC; For Revision 2024. Version 1.0. https://emscimprovement.center/education-and-resources/peak/peak-status-epilepticus/eiic-trekk-bottom-line-recommendations-pediatric-status-epilepticus/.
- EIIC-TREKK Pediatric Status Epilepticus Algorithm. April 2022 Version: 4.0 Review date: 2024. https://emscimprovement.center/education-and-resources/peak/peak-status-epilepticus/trekk-eiic-pediatric-status-epilepticus-practice-guideline/.
- Kristinsson, George. Status Epilepticus. PEM GUIDES. 7th edition. NYU Langone Health; 2020: 551-557.
