| Literature DB >> 28927394 |
Robert D Nass1, Sina Meiling1, René P Andrié2, Christian E Elger1, Rainer Surges3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Generalized tonic-clonic seizures (GTCS) frequently lead to emergency inpatient referrals. Laboratory blood values are routinely performed on admission to detect underlying causes and metabolic or cardiac complications. Our goal was to assess the nature and frequency of complications occurring in association with GTCS.Entities:
Keywords: Creatine kinase; Epilepsy; Generalized tonic-clonic seizures; Injuries; Myocardial infarction; Troponine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28927394 PMCID: PMC5605980 DOI: 10.1186/s12883-017-0965-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
Fig. 1Flow-chart of patient screening, inclusion and exclusion
Overview of demographic data
| Sex: | Women 95 (42.6%) | Men 128 (57.4%) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number of seizures: | 181 with single GTCS (81.2%) | 42 with seizure series (18.8%) | |
| Age: | Mean 45 ± 19.2 years | Median 44 years | range 13–75 years |
| Vascular risk factors: | None: 161 (72.2%) | One: 50 (22.4%) | Multiple: 12 (5.3%) |
| Seizure history: | 1st seizure: 22 (9.9%) | Known Epilepsy: 196 (87.9%) | Substance withdrawal seizure: 5 (2.2%) (4 alcohol, 1 benzodiazepines) |
| Duration of epilepsy: | Mean 13.1 ± 7 years | Median 7 years | range 0–64 years |
| No. of current AED: | Mean 1.17 ± 1 AED | Median 1 AED | 0–6 AED |
| Length of stay: | Mean 4.6 ± 3 days | Median 4.9 days | 0–35 days |
| Discharge or transfer to: | Home: 214 (96%) | Dept. Medicine: 5 (2.2%) | Dept. Psychiatry: (1.8%) |
| Epileptogenic zone: | unclassified: 124 (55.6%) | Temporal: 38 (17%) | Generalized: 23 (10.3%) |
| Frontal: 9 (4%) | Occipital 1 (0.4%) | Parietal: 1 (0.4%) | |
| Multifocal: 19 (8.5%) | Hemispheric: 5 (2.2%) | Other: 2 (0.9%) | |
| Seizure types: | GTCS only: 125 (56.1%) | GTCS and absence: 16 (6.8%) | GTCS and myoclonus: 4 (1.8%) |
| GTCS and SPS: 12 (5.3%) | GTCS, SPS and CPS: 64 (28.7%) | LGS (GTCS, TS, CPS): 2 (0.9%) | |
| Etiology: | Unknown: 127 (57%) | Idiopathic/genetic: 16 (7.2%) | Hippocampal Sclerosis: 12 (5.4%) |
| Perinatal brain damage: 11 (4.9%) | Posttraumatic: 9 (4%) | Vascular malformation: 9 (4%) | |
| Postischemic: 7 (3.1%) | Postinfectious: 5 (2.2%) | Other lesions: 4 (1.8%) | |
| Unspecific lesion: 4 (1.8%) | Cortical malformation: 5 (2.2%) | Neoplastic: 3 (1.3%) | |
| Posthemorrhagic: 2 (0.9%) | Lennox Gastaut Syndrome: 2 (0.9%) | Immune mediated: 1 (0.4%) | |
| seizure frequency: | GTCS | Persistent (>1 in 6 months): 57 (25.3%) | |
| Other seizure types | Daily: 11 (4.9%) | ||
| Preexisting conditions | All cardiovascular risk factors 62 / 223 (27.8%) | Cardiovascular conditions (CAD, structural heart disease, arrhythmia, history of stroke, peripheral vascular disease): 58 /223 (26%) | |
Summary of vital signs recorded by the emergency services
| Feature | Systolic blood pressure | Heart rate | Oxymetric SpO2 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Availabe n | 192 (85.6%) | 194 (87%) | 188 (84.3%) |
| Class | Hypotension <100 mmHg: 4 (2.1%) | Bradycardia <60 bpm: 2 (1%) | Normoxia 91–100% SpO2: 177 (94.1%) |
| Normotension 100–140 mmHg: 110 (57.3%) | Normocardia 60–100 bpm: 108 (55.7%) | Mild hypoxia 86–90% SpO2: 6 (3.2%) | |
| Hypertension 140–180 mmHg: 59 (30.7%) | Tachycardia >100 bpm: 80 (41.2%) | Moderate hypoxia 71–85% SpO2: 3 (1.3%) | |
| Hypert. Emergency >180 mmHg: 15 (7.8%) | Critical tachycardia > (220-age): 2 (1%) | Critical hypoxia <71% SpO2: 2 (1.1%) | |
| Mean | 140.75 mmHg | 101.5 bpm | 95.8% SpO2 |
| SD | 27.9 mmHg | 20.3 bpm | 5.2% SpO2 |
| Med, | 140 mmHg | 100 bpm | 97% SpO2 |
| Range | 80–250 mmHg | 54–160 bpm | 50–100 SpO2 |
Overview of documented complications in association with GTCS
| Complication | N | % |
|---|---|---|
| Injuries | 102/223 | 45.7 |
| Troponin elevations | 9/75 | 12 |
| Aggressive, delirious or psychotic behavior | 14 / 223 | 6.3 |
| Respiratory problems | 7/223 | 6.3 |
| Prolonged impairment of consciousness | 11 / 223 | 4.9 |
| Acute kidney injury | 5 /136 | 3.7 |
| Rhabdomyolysis | 4/207 | 1.9 |
Fig. 2Patients with abnormally elevated cTNI levels were significantly older (p = 0.003) than patients with cTNI within normal levels. Wide bar: mean age. Error bars: standard deviation
Overview of patients with cTNI elevations (ng/ml). 4 were diagnosed with NSTEMI, 1 with NSTEMI as a prodrome to a STEMI 4 days later. The NSTEMI diagnosis was “formal” and used the definition of rising cTNI levels in follow up laboratory tests. No patient except the one with a STEMI reported chest pain
| No | Sex* | Age* | Max. cTNI | Epilepsy Hx | Medical Hx | EKG | Cardiac Dx | Other complications | outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1 | 70–79 | 0.68 | EZ: temporal | CNS-vasculitis, subdural hematoma, stroke, dementia, severe coronary artery disease with MI, stenting and aorto-coronary venous bypass, ICD, HTN, DM2, alcohol abuse | New AF | NSTEMI | No | Discharge home |
| 2 | 1 | 80–89 | 0.14 | EZ: unknown | TBI, AF, HTN, bedridden | AF | AF, no ischemia | Delirium | Discharge home |
| 3 | 2 | 70–79 | 0.38 | EZ: unknown | Hypothyroidism, Dyslipidemia | T-inversion | NSTEMI, received PTCA | Skull laceration | Discharge home |
| 4 | 2 | 70–79 | 0.23 | EZ: multifocal | HTN, ICH, vascular dementia | Normal | No ischemia | No | Discharge home |
| 5 | 1 | 70–79 | 0.34- > 15.7 | EZ: unknown | Stroke, PD, CHD with MI, polymyalgia, gastrointestinal bleeding | ST-depression, then elevation | NSTEMI as prodrome to STEMI 4 days later, received PTCA with DES | No | Transfer to cardiology, then home |
| 6 | 2 | 50–59 | 3.85 | EZ: unknown | Craniofacial dysostosis | Delayed R-progression | NSTEMI | No | Discharge home |
| 7 | 2 | 70–79 | 1.35 | EZ: unknown | TBI, stroke, coronary artery disease, NSTEMI | T-Inversion | NSTEMI | Sopor, intubation, skull laceration | Transfer to Geriatrics |
| 8 | 2 | 70–79 | 0.12 | EZ: unknown | Stroke, AF, urinary tract infection | AF | AF, no ischemia | Sopor, intubation | Transfer to Geriatrics, death within a month |
| 9 | 2 | 40–49 | 0.09 | EZ: temporal | Hypothyroidism | Normal | No ischemia | Facial bruising | Discharge home |
AF = atrial fibrillation; DES = drug eluding stent; DM2, diabetes mellitus type 2; EZ = epileptogenic zone; E: etiology; HTN, arterial hypertension; Hx = history; ICH, intracranial hemorrhage; NSTEMI = non ST elevation myocardial infarction; PTCA = percutaneous, transluminal coronary angiography; STEMI = ST elevation myocardial infarction; TBI = traumatic brain injury. *Sex is not indicated and age range (instead of age) is given to avoid potential identification of the patients (according to BMC policy)
Fig. 3Time course of CK measurements for individual patients (a). An outlier with a CK 350 times above the upper limit of normal was clipped from the figure. The patients with severe rhabdomyolysis are labeled in red. Time course of CK measurements in the week after the emergency admissions (b). Wide bar: mean. Error bars: standard deviation. The actual measurements are normalized to sex- specific upper limits of the reference range
Overview of documented injuries. TBI, traumatic brain injury. ICH, intracranial hemorrhage
| No injuries | 121 (54.3%) |
|---|---|
| Mouth/nose: | Tongue/cheek-bite: 42 (18.8%) |
| Epistaxis: 1 (0.4%) | |
| Tooth injuries: 1 (0.4%) | |
| head/face: | Bruise/laceration: 57(25.5%) |
| Mild TBI: 3 (1.3%) | |
| Skull fracture: 3 (1.3%) | |
| TBI with ICH: 1 (0.4%) | |
| Torso/limbs: | Bruise/laceration: 10 (4.5%) |
| Fractures: 4 (1.8%) | |
| radiographies: | 129 (57.8%) |
| Pathologic: 7 (6%) |
Overview of emergency radiographic tests applied
| Imaging mode | N | % |
|---|---|---|
| Radiography alone | 1 / 223 | 0.4 |
| CT | 103 / 223 | 46.2 |
| Radiography and CT | 7 / 223 | 3.1 |
| MRI | 4 / 223 | 1.8 |
| Indications: | N | % |
| Head trauma | 75 / 129 | 58.1 |
| Prolonged alteration of consciousness | 12 / 129 | 9.3 |
| First seizure | 15 / 129 | 11.6 |
| Todd-phenomenon | 10 / 129 | 7.8 |
| Focal deficit | 1 / 129 | 0.8 |
| Known vasc, malformation with headache | 3 / 129 | 2.3 |
| Risk factors for hemorrhage | 3 / 129 | 2.3 |
| Reemergent seizure after long remission | 3 /129 | 2.3 |
| Aspiration | 1 /129 | 0.8 |
| history of brain abscess | 1 /129 | 0.8 |
| Backpain | 1 /129 | 0.8 |
| history of stroke | 1 /129 | 0.8 |
| unknown etiology | 3 / 129 | 2.3 |