| Literature DB >> 27120626 |
Jessica J Falco-Walter1, Thomas Bleck2.
Abstract
Status epilepticus is the most severe form of epilepsy, with a high mortality rate and high health care costs. Status epilepticus is divided into four stages: early, established, refractory, and super-refractory. While initial treatment with benzodiazepines has become standard of care for early status epilepticus, treatment after benzodiazepine failure (established status epilepticus (ESE)) is incompletely studied. Effective treatment of ESE is critical as morbidity and mortality increases dramatically the longer convulsive status epilepticus persists. Phenytoin/fosphenytoin, valproic acid, levetiracetam, phenobarbital, and lacosamide are the most frequently prescribed antiseizure medications for treatment of ESE. To date there are no class 1 data to support pharmacologic recommendations of one agent over another. We review each of these medications, their pharmacology, the scientific evidence in support and against each in the available literature, adverse effects and safety profiles, dosing recommendations, and limitations of the available evidence. We also discuss future directions including the established status epilepticus treatment trial (ESETT). Substantial further research is urgently needed to identify these patients (particularly those with non-convulsive status epilepticus), elucidate the most efficacious antiseizure treatment with head-to-head randomized prospective trials, and determine whether this differs for convulsive vs. non-convulsive ESE.Entities:
Keywords: antiseizure; established status epilepticus; lacosamide; levetiracetam; phenobarbital; phenytoin; status epilepticus; treatment; valproic acid
Year: 2016 PMID: 27120626 PMCID: PMC4882478 DOI: 10.3390/jcm5050049
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Definitions of Status Epilepticus.
| Time after which if seizures do not terminate patient is considered in status epilepticus (t1) | Time after which ongoing seizures have long term consequences (t2) | |
| Convulsive status epilepticus | 5 min | 30 min |
| Focal status epilepticus with impaired consciousness | 10 min | 60 min |
| Absence status epilepticus | 10–15 min | unknown |
| Established statusepilepticus | Status epilepticus that persists after treatment with a benzodiazepine (1st line treatment) | |
| Refractory status epilepticus | Status epilepticus that persists after a 1st line agent (benzodiazepine) and 2nd lines | |
| agent (additional agent such as levetiracetam, phenytoin, valproic acid) have failed | ||
Figure 1Timeline of the progression of status epilepticus.