| Literature DB >> 27089373 |
Douglas M Smith1, Emily L McGinnis2, Diana J Walleigh3, Nicholas S Abend4.
Abstract
Status epilepticus is a common pediatric neurological emergency. Management includes prompt administration of appropriately selected anti-seizure medications, identification and treatment of seizure precipitant(s), as well as identification and management of associated systemic complications. This review discusses the definitions, classification, epidemiology and management of status epilepticus and refractory status epilepticus in children.Entities:
Keywords: pediatric; seizure; status epilepticus
Year: 2016 PMID: 27089373 PMCID: PMC4850470 DOI: 10.3390/jcm5040047
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
International League Against Epilepsy definition of status epilepticus indicates that emergency treatment of status epilepticus should be started at t1 and long-term consequences may occur at t2. Adopted from Trinka et al., 2015 [6].
| Status Epilepticus Type | Time 1 (Treatment Started) | Time 2 (Consequences Expected) |
|---|---|---|
| Tonic-clonic | 5 min | 30 min |
| Focal with impaired consciousness | 10 min | >60 min |
| Absence | 15 min | Unknown |
Dosing recommendations and common side effects for emergent/initial-therapy-phase and urgent/second-therapy-phase anti-seizure medications. Adapted from the Neurocritical Care Society [7] and American Epilepsy Society [8] guidelines for status epilepticus management.
| Medication | Recommended Dosing | Serious Adverse Effects | Other Considerations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Emergent/Initial Phase Therapy Phase Medications | |||
| Lorazepam | IV: 0.1 mg/kg IV up to 4 mg per dose, may repeat in 5–10 min | Hypotension | Dilute 1:1 with saline. |
| Diazepam | IV: 0.15–0.2 mg/kg IV up to 10 mg per dose, may repeat in 5 min | Hypotension | Short duration, active metabolite. |
| Midazolam | Adult IM: 0.2 mg/kg up to 10 mg | Hypotension | Active metabolite, renal elimination, short duration. |
| Urgent Control Therapy/Second Therapy Phase Medications | |||
| Phenytoin OR Fosphenytoin | 20 mg/kg IV, may give additional 5–10 mg/kg | Hypotension | Phenytoin is only compatible in saline and the IV contains propylene glycol. |
| Levetiracetam | 20–60 mg/kg IV | Aggression | Minimal drug interactions, not hepatically metabolized. |
| Phenobarbital | 15–20 mg/kg IV, may give an additional 5–10 mg/kg | Hypotension | IV contains propylene glycol. |
| Valproic acid | 20–40 mg/kg IV, may give an additional 20 mg/kg | Hyperammonemia | May be a preferred agent in patients with generalized epilepsy. |