CBD 1: Status epilepticus Flashcards

1
Q

Status epilepticus.

a) Define
b) 2 types - which is more worrying?
c) Risk factors/ triggers

A

a) Status is…
- Seizures > 5 mins, or
- Consecutive seizures with no recovery in between
- Also treat if > 3 seizures in one hour

b) Convulsive (medical emergency) and non-convulsive

c) Predisposing factors.
- Extremes of age
- Structural brain pathology
- Intellectual disability

Triggers.

  • First presentation
  • Anti-epileptic drug withdrawal/ non-compliance
  • Alcohol intoxication or withdrawal; drug overdose
  • Intercurrent illness (eg. infection, MI)
  • Metabolic disturbance (eg, hypoglycaemia, Na+, Ca2+)
  • Head injury/ SOL/ stroke
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2
Q

Status: initial management (A - E)

A
  • Move away from danger and ensure head is protected
  • 1st line: buccal midazolam or rectal diazepam

Airway.
- Loosen any tight-fitting neckwear
- Secure airway: head tilt, chin lift; NPA, suction, etc.
(avoid OP airway/iGel as will not tolerate)

Breathing.

  • high-flow oxygen
  • SpO2 monitoring in hospital
  • ABG (risk of hypoxia)

Circulation.

  • IV access
  • Take BM, take bloods
  • Administer IV lorazepam and fluids as necessary
  • ECG/ cardiac monitoring

Disability.

  • GCS, pupils, focal neurology, glucose
  • Consider CT head

Exposure.

  • Temperature (?infection, hypothermia)
  • Rashes, abdomen, calves, etc.
  • Signs of drug/ alcohol abuse (jaundice, track marks, etc.)
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3
Q

Status: treatment algorithm

  • 1st line
  • 2nd line
  • 3rd line
  • Refractory
  • Adjuvant treatments
A

1st line:

  • Hospital: lorazepam (if IV access)
  • Community: buccal midazolam or rectal diazepam
2nd line (after 10 mins):
- 2nd dose of benzo
3rd line (after another 10 mins)
- Antiepileptic drug: IV phenytoin or phenobarbital

Refractory status

  • Ring anaesthetics
  • RSI: sodium thiopental or propofol

Adjuvant treatments.

  • Oxygen, fluids, etc.
  • Glucose (if hypoglycaemic)
  • Correct any other electrolyte abnormalities
  • Thiamine if alcoholic (WKS)
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4
Q

Status: further management

A

Identify and treat complications.

  • CXR for ?aspiration
  • CT head for ?head injury
  • XR shoulder for ?dislocation

Explore reasons for status

Secondary prevention.

  • Action plan and patient/ carer/ family education
  • Stabilise on regular AEDs
  • Remove / reduce triggers
  • Prescribe buccal midazolam for any future episodes
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5
Q

Phenytoin: cautions

A
  • Already taking phenytoin (risk of toxicity)
  • Pregnancy (teratogenic)
  • LFTs
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6
Q

Status: differentials

A
  • NES

- Eclampsia - treat with 4g IV MgSO4 + Labetalol

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7
Q

Status: complications

A

Traumatic.

  • Posterior shoulder dislocation
  • Head injury

Neurological.

  • Cerebral oedema
  • Encephalopathy

Metabolic.

  • Lactic acidosis (due to hypoxia and anaerobic resp)
  • Hyperkalaemia (due to muscle cell breakdown)
  • Rhabdomyolysis - CK release, deposits in PCT and leads to AKI

Respiratory.
- Aspiration/airway obstruction

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8
Q

Why lorazepam preferred over diazepam?

A

Quicker onset, higher and more predictable efficacy, more CNS-specific

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9
Q

Alcohol withdrawal: presentation

a) Early
b) Later

A

a) Early - sweating, agitation, tremor, nausea, vomiting, insomnia, alcohol cravings, palpitations

b) Later:
- 12-24 hours: visual, auditory or tactile hallucinations (formication, Lilluputian)
- 24-72 hours: withdrawal seizures and DTs (seizures, tachycardic, hypertensive, confusion)

Note: may present in acute withdrawal or may be admitted for another reason and develop acute withdrawal symptoms

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10
Q

Alcohol withdrawal: management
a) Non-drug
b) Drug - main one and contraindication (alternative?)
c) When should treatment be stopped?
Adjuvant treatments
d) Screening patients: prophylactic treatment

A

a) - Calm and well-lit environment
- Continuity of nurses and environment
- Orientate the patient
- Treat any precipitants

b) Benzos:
- 1st line: oral chlordiazepoxide reducing regime over ~ 5 to 7 days (start at ~ 20 mg QDS on day 1, then reduce)
- Alternative: except in liver failure - give IV lorazepam/diazepam
- Monitor daily (breathalyse if necessary to confirm abstinence)

c) - Stop treatment after 5 - 7 days or when detox complete (may need longer if seizures)
- Also stop if patient relapses in this period

c) - IV thiamine (Pabrinex)

d) - Alcohol volume: > 10 - 15 units/day
- Previous withdrawal symptoms/ DTs (or need to keep drinking to prevent these)
- Previous DTs

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11
Q

Wernicke’s vs. Korsakoff’s

A

Wernicke’s.
- ACE: Ataxia, Confusion, Eye signs (CN VI palsy: ophthalmoplegia, nystagmus)

Korsakoff’s.

  • irreversible
  • anterograde and retrograde amnesia, confabulation
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12
Q

Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome.

a) Why alcoholics become thiamine deficient
b) Management

A

a) - Gastritis and malabsorption
- Poor diet
- Thiamine is an enzyme in alcohol metabolism

b) - IV or IM thiamine (Pabrinex)
- Note: can be given orally, but generally not well-absorbed in heavy drinkers

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13
Q

Relapse prevention in alcoholics.

a) Non-drug measures
b) Drugs and their modus operandi
c) Who must be admitted for relapse prevention?

A

a) - Counselling, CBT, group therapy (eg. AA)

b) Drugs.
- Acamprosate - GABA and NMDA receptor antagonist; reduces cravings
- Naltrexone - competitive opioid antagonist; prevents pleasurable effect of alcohol
- Disulfiram - acetaldehyde dehydrogenase (ADH) inhibitor - causes hangover symptoms on ingestion (headache, nausea, vomiting, flushing, etc.)

c) Inpatient care is recommended for:
- Patients at risk of suicide.
- Those without social support.
- Patients who have a history of severe withdrawal reactions.

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14
Q

Smoking cessation drugs.

best when combined with psychological support

A

NRT

Varenicline - reduces cravings and pleasurable effects

Buproprion - reduces cravings

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15
Q

For a patient in whom a seizure needs to be excluded, and may not have been witnessed, what biochemical test may be useful?

A

Serum lactate

  • do an ABG or VBG
  • raised lactate would be consistent with generalised tonic-clonic (GTC) seizure activity
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