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
Do not use this guideline for patients presenting with:
- Seizures related to head trauma
- Seizures related to eclampsia
- Status epilepticus - see Status epilepticus guideline
RECOGNITION AND ASSESSMENT
Symptoms and signs
Before
- Provoking factors include:
- sleep deprivation
- acute alcohol or substance intoxication
- alcohol withdrawal
- Prodromal symptoms of seizures often bizarre and hard for patients to describe
During
- Where possible, obtain eyewitness accounts
- Symptoms/signs that may be present:
- myoclonic jerking
- tonic-clonic movements
- lateral tongue biting (biting tip of the tongue or the cheek is not suggestive of a generalised seizure)
- incontinence (not specific and can occur in any type of collapse in patient with full bladder)
After
- Generalised seizures are usually followed by a period of at least 10 min (often more), when patient truly confused (post-ictal state)
- almost always have amnesia for this period
- Other symptoms (e.g. headache and aching limbs) are more suggestive of seizure than syncope
Examination
- Look for any injury sustained, including evidence of lateral tongue biting
- Full neurological examination
- Auscultation of heart for murmurs
- Stigmata of other conditions associated with seizures
- e.g. chronic liver disease/alcoholism, café-au-lait spots suggesting neurofibromatosis
Investigations
- Blood glucose
- U&E
- Serum corrected calcium
- FBC
- If alcoholism suspected, LFT
- ECG
- CT scan of head if:
- new focal neurological deficit
- persistent altered mental status
- fever or persistent headache
- recent head trauma
- history of cancer or HIV infection
- focal or partial onset seizure
- anticoagulation or bleeding diathesis
- history of stroke or TIA
- follow-up cannot be ensured e.g patients with alcohol / illicit drug use induced seizure
Differential diagnosis
- Several conditions can mimic an epileptic seizure
Vasovagal episode
- Loss of consciousness, usually provoked (e.g. pain)
- Presyncopal symptoms include:
- dizziness
- nausea
- clamminess
- 'feeling faint'
- Rapid recovery of awareness
Postural hypotension
- Within 3 min of standing, systolic BP falls to <90 mmHg or falls by >20 mmHg
Cardiac syncope
- Causes include:
- ischaemia
- Wolff-Parkinson-White (WPW) syndrome
- long-QT syndrome
- bradycardia
- tachycardia
- structural heart disease (e.g. aortic stenosis)
- Syncope can occur with or without cardiac symptoms
- A Stokes-Adams attack is classically associated with pallor followed on recovery by flushing
Carotid sinus hypersensitivity
- Rare
- Usually in an elderly patient
- Precipitated by head turning or pressure on neck (e.g. shaving)
Hyperventilation
- Anxiety
- Paraesthesia of perioral region or extremities
- Palpitations
- Chest pain
Electrolyte abnormalities
- Hypoglycaemia
- Hyponatraemia
- Hypo- or hypercalcaemia
- Uraemia
IMMEDIATE MANAGEMENT
Known epilepsy
- Advise patient to contact their epilepsy nurse after discharge
Review triggers
- Poor compliance with medication
- Intercurrent illness or infection
- Alcohol or drug ingestion
- Part of normal seizure pattern
First adult generalised seizure
Medication
- If seizure resolved spontaneously, none
- inappropriate use of diazepam can result in unnecessary admission and cause respiratory depression
- Seek advice from neurology SpR or consultant before starting anticonvulsant therapy
Results of tests
- If hypoglycaemia, address underlying cause, then reassess. See Acute hypoglycaemia guideline
- If focal neurological abnormalities found or CT scan abnormal, contact on-call neurology SpR
Admission criteria
- Patient remains drowsy or comatose
- Neurological examination abnormal
- Investigation results abnormal
- Patient at high risk of further seizures (e.g. alcohol withdrawal)
- Patient cannot be supervised by a responsible adult
DISCHARGE AND FOLLOW-UP
Known epilepsy
- Continue with present epilepsy care
First seizure
- Refer for further assessment at neurology outpatient 'First fit' clinic
Advice to patients
- Advise patient to return to A&E if a further episode occurs
- Advise patient that they have been referred to First Fit Clinic
Driving and work
- Advise patient to stop driving and to inform DVLA
- following a first single epileptic seizure, Group 1 entitlement drivers (motor cars and motorcycles) may restart driving after 6 months if agreed by appropriate specialist and no abnormality found (e.g. EEG and brain scan normal)
- if any pathology exists, refrain from driving for 1 yr before subsequent medical review
- Patients should inform their employer that they have had a seizure in order to fulfill the requirements of Health and Safety at Work legislation
- Record this advice explicitly on casualty card