Seizure

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Background

SYNCOPE VS. SEIZURE

twitches vs more sig movements

quick return baseline vs postictal

none vs retrograde amnesia

none vs loss of continence

tongue biting (tip) vs tongue biting (sides)


Diagnosis

SEIZURE

1) Abrupt onset

2) Brief duratoin (typically <1.5min)

3) AMS

4) Purposeless activity

5) Unprovoked

6) Postictal state


DDX

I. Syncope

II. Hyperventilation

III. Breath-holding (children)

IV. Toxic/metabolic

    A. ETOH
    B. Hypoglycemia
    C. Tetanus
    D. Strychnine/camphos
    E. Extrapyramidal reaction

V. CNS event

    A. TIA
    B. Narcolepsy
    C. Carotid sinus hypersens

VI. Movement disorder

    A. Hemiballismus
    B. Tic

VII. Psych

    A. Pseudoseizure
    B. Fugue
    C. Panic attack

VIII. Seizure

    A. Primary (epilepsy)
         1. Subtheraputic level
    B. Secondary
         1. Encephalitis
         2. Poisonin
         3. Encephalopathy
         4. Metabolic disorder
         5. Pregnancy (eclampsia)
         6. CNS infection
         7. CNS tumor
         8. Supratheraputic levels
         9. Febrile


Workup

A. Typical with Known Sz Hx

1) Icon

2) Glucose check

3) Anticonvulsant levels

4) +/- CBC & Chem 10

5) +/- Utox


B. New Onset

0) Icon/Glu check

1) Head CT (*ED or short F/U if return nl)

2) ECG

3) CXR

4) UA/Utox

5) ETOH

6) CBC, Chem 10, LFTs

7) Anticonvulsant levels

8) DMV form/driving instructions


-neuro-

9) LP

10) HIV, ESR, RPR, ANA

11) EEG


Treatment

Status = Sz >10min or intermittent without recovery >10min


1) O2/airway/protection

2) Glu & Icon check (consider D50W)

3) Ativan 2mg IVP (or Valium 5-10mg IVP)

4) Ativan 2mg IVP

5) Dilantin (phenytoin) 1gm over 20min

    -(20mg/kg no faster than 50mg/min)
    -contraindicatd in heart block
    -monitor BP/rythm strip
    -follow with dilantin 300mg PO QHS

6) If continued, give Phenobarb 1gm over 20min

    -(20mg/kg no faster than 50mg/min)
    -prepare to intubate


NO IV

-versed (midazolam) IM (0.2mg/kg)

-valium (diazepam) PR (0.5-1.0mg/kg up to 20mg)


Refractory Seizure

-hyponatremia (infants, psych, etc) --> 3%NS

-isoniazide overdose --> pyridoxine


Refractory Status Epilepticus, can also consider one of the following:

-High Dose Phenytoin (30mg/kg)

-Valproic Acid

-Propofol


Disposition

Negative workup:

A. Typical with known seizure history --> home after reload

B. New onset --> home with neuro follow up (admit to Neuro at Harbor for expedited MRI)


See Also

Neuro: Seizure Levels and Reloading

Peds: Seizure (Peds)

Peds: Febrile Seizure


Source

2/27/06 DONALDSON

2/20/10 PANI