DEVELOPMENT SITE ONLY
Please use current guidelines available on the UHNM intranet for patient treatment
Please use current guidelines available on the UHNM intranet for patient treatment
RECOGNITION AND ASSESSMENT
Symptoms and signs
- Status epilepticus is a state of seizure activity lasting for 30 min with no return to consciousness
- A generalised seizure lasting longer than 5 min is highly unlikely to stop spontaneously
Refer urgently to on-call neurology SpR any patient with a seizure lasting >5 min
Enquire
- Previous diagnosis of epilepsy
- Previous history of status epilepticus
- Recent withdrawal of anti-convulsant drug/missed medication
- Respiratory tract or urinary tract infection
- Vomiting/diarrhoea
Important underlying causes
- Infection
- meningitis
- encephalitis
- abscess
- Acute head injury
- Cerebral tumour
- Metabolic disorders
- renal failure
- hypoglycaemia
- hypercalcaemia
- Drug overdosage
- tricyclics
- phenothiazines
- theophylline
- isoniazid
- cocaine
- Acute cerebral infarction
- Alcohol intoxication/withdrawal
- Anoxic encephalopathy
Investigations
- Capillary blood glucose
- Venous blood glucose
- FBC, U&E, Calcium
- If patient has history of seizures check serum anticonvulsant concentration ONLY if there are clinical symptoms and/or signs of toxicity, suspicion of non-compliance or the patient is pregnant
- If new onset epilepsy, CT scan to exclude space-occupying lesion
Differential diagnosis
- Non-epileptic attack disorders (pseudo-seizures)
IMMEDIATE MANAGEMENT
- Treat without delay
- generalised tonic-clonic status is potentially life-threatening
- Do not attempt to put anything into patient’s mouth during a seizure, even if tongue injured
- Intubation, if necessary, requires special care
- Avoid rolling patient during a seizure unless absolutely necessary as this can cause injury to shoulder/hip joints
0-5 min
Watch and support
- Watch and assess (epileptic seizure, syncope, non-epileptic attack)
- Assess secondary metabolic factors (hypoglycaemia, electrolyte imbalance, lactic acidosis, dehydration, hyperpyrexia)
- Protect airway and support respiration if possible
- if there is any period of relaxation, try carefully to insert an airway
- Oxygen (high flow mask) 10 L/min
IV access
- Blood test - glucose, U&E, calcium, FBC
- if patient taking anticonvulsant drug, check serum anticonvulsant. See Therapeutic drug monitoring guideline
- Lorazepam 4 mg IV (diluted 1:1 with sodium chloride 0.9% or water for injection) as single slow bolus injection into large vein
- if lorazepam unavailable, give diazepam (Diazemuls®) 10 mg IV over 2 min (prolonged sedative effect)
- monitor oxygen saturation carefully for evidence of respiratory depression
- If poor nutrition/alcoholism, give parenteral thiamine as Pabrinex IV High potency injection 2 pairs of ampoules (mixed) by IV infusion in sodium chloride 0.9% 100 mL over 30 min 8-hrly
- If hypoglycaemia suspected, give glucose 20% 100 mL or glucose 10% 200 mL IV over 15 min into a large vein (care is required as these concentrations are irritant)
5-10 min
- Call neurology SpR
- Repeat lorazepam 4 mg IV if necessary (diluted 1:1 with sodium chloride 0.9% or water for injection); as a single bolus injection into a large vein
- do not exceed total dose of 8 mg of lorazepam
- if lorazepam unavailable, give diazepam (Diazemuls®) 10 mg IV slowly over 2 min repeated, if necessary, after a further 5 min
- do not exceed total dose of 20 mg of diazepam
- Monitor oxygen saturation carefully for evidence of respiratory depression
10-30 min
Seizures continue after 10 min
- If patient not already taking maintenance phenytoin therapy, give phenytoin IV with cardiac monitoring unless contraindicated. See Phenytoin IV guideline
- If phenytoin contraindicated, give levetiracetam IV. See Levetiracetam IV guideline
- If already taking maintenance phenytoin therapy, contact neurology SpR to discuss reduced dose of IV phenytoin, or use of levetiracetam. See Levetiracetam IV guideline
- Check blood gases
- If, at any stage, respiratory depression or cardiac arrhythmia is apparent or pH <7.0, contact critical care
- If still unconscious after 15 min and hypoglycaemia confirmed, repeat glucose 20% 100 mL or glucose 10% 200 mL IV over 15 min
30 minutes
Satisfactory control still not established after 30 min
- If neurology junior staff are in attendance, contact SpR or consultant for advice and arrange transfer to critical care
- Further specialised management in critical care area
Reasons for failure to respond
- Incorrect diagnosis
- Underlying cause (e.g. metabolic abnormalities) not recognised and treated
- Delay in intubation and anaesthesia
- Inappropriate use of drugs/dosage
- Delay in initiating maintenance anticonvulsant therapy
SUBSEQUENT MANAGEMENT
- All patients should now be under the care of the neurology team
Not improving
- Reconsider underlying causes
- If patient transferred to critical care and anaesthetised, arrange EEG as soon as possible after intubation to establish state of cerebral ictal activity
- If continued sedation necessary, repeat EEG 24-hrly
Improving
- Once seizure activity has ceased, place patient in recovery position
- In patients with previously diagnosed epilepsy, recommence previous AED therapy
- In newly diagnosed patients, neurologist to introduce appropriate therapy before discharge
- Continue oxygen as required. See Hypoxaemia guideline
DISCHARGE AND FOLLOW-UP
- Discharge when patient seizure-free for 48 hr and fit to leave hospital, and anti-convulsant drug therapy established
- Review existing follow-up appointments for patients with a previous history of epilepsy
- Ensure patients with no previous history have review appointment arranged
- Refer all cases to clinical nurse specialist before discharge if not already seen during admission