management of epilepsy in children

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Management of EPILEPSY in Children

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Page 1: Management of epilepsy in children

Management of EPILEPSY in

Children

Page 2: Management of epilepsy in children

Childhood Epilepsy

• Seizure in childhood is common and indicates

cerebral diseases and damage developing brain

• Incidence Febrile 2%, idiopathic 1%

• Clinical feature limited to motor phenomena

• EEG signs are are often variable and nonspecific

and their interpretation difficult

Page 3: Management of epilepsy in children

WHAT IS THE ETIOLOGY OF THE EPILEPSY ?WHAT IS THE ETIOLOGY OF THE EPILEPSY ?

INFANCY 1-6MONTHSINFANCY 1-6MONTHS

CONGENITAL MALDEVELOPMENTCONGENITAL MALDEVELOPMENT

BIRTH INJURYBIRTH INJURY

BIRTH ANOXIABIRTH ANOXIA

HYPOCALCEMIAHYPOCALCEMIA

HYPOGLYCEMIAHYPOGLYCEMIA

VIT B6 DEFICIENCYVIT B6 DEFICIENCY

PHENYLKETONURIA ETC.PHENYLKETONURIA ETC.

Page 4: Management of epilepsy in children

WHAT IS THE ETIOLOGY OF THE EPILEPSY ?WHAT IS THE ETIOLOGY OF THE EPILEPSY ?

EARLY CHILDHOOD 6MONTHS TO 3YEARSEARLY CHILDHOOD 6MONTHS TO 3YEARS

FEBRILE SEIZUREFEBRILE SEIZURE

BIRTH INJURYBIRTH INJURY

BIRTH ANOXIABIRTH ANOXIA

INFECTIONSINFECTIONS

TRAUMATRAUMA

Page 5: Management of epilepsy in children

WHAT IS THE ETIOLOGY OF THE EPILEPSY ?WHAT IS THE ETIOLOGY OF THE EPILEPSY ?

3-10YEARS3-10YEARS

PERINATAL ANOXIAPERINATAL ANOXIA

BIRTH INJURYBIRTH INJURY

INFECTIONSINFECTIONS

THROMBOSIS OF CEREBRAL THROMBOSIS OF CEREBRAL ARTERIES OR VEINSARTERIES OR VEINS

Page 6: Management of epilepsy in children

WHAT IS THE ETIOLOGY OF THE EPILEPSY ?WHAT IS THE ETIOLOGY OF THE EPILEPSY ?

10-18YEARS10-18YEARS

IDIOPATHICIDIOPATHIC

GRANULOMAGRANULOMA

TRAUMATRAUMA

ADULTHOODADULTHOOD

Page 7: Management of epilepsy in children

Basic Classification

• Primary

– focal

• simple

• complex partial

– generalized

• Secondary– focal– generalized

• Situation related– Febrile– Drug induced

Page 8: Management of epilepsy in children

Neonatal seizure

Incidence

• 5-16/1000 live birth

• Upto 23% in

premature infants

• Morbidity 35-75%

• Mortality 16-60%

Clinical

1. Subtle fragmented

2. Tonic seizure

3. Clonic Seizure

4. Unilateral

Page 9: Management of epilepsy in children

Causes of neonatal seizure

• Hypoxic Ischemic Encephalopathy

• Neonatal CVA’s• Intracranial infection• Cerebral malformation• Metabolic

– Hypocalcemia– Hypoglycemia– Hyponatremia– Inborn error of metabolism– Bilirubin encephalopathy– Hypomanicemia– Pyridoxin dependency

• Benign and familial syndromes– Benign familial neonatal

convulsion– Benign neonatal seizure– Benign neonatal sleep

myoclonus• Toxic or withdrawal conulsion

– Drugs and toxin– Anticonvulsant

• Specific– Ohtahara’s syndrome– Neonatal myoclonic

encephalopathy– Early infentile epileptic

encephalopathy

Page 10: Management of epilepsy in children

Infantile spasm (West’s syndrome

• Rare 0.25-0.42/1000 LB

• Onset – 3 months – 1year (4-6 months)

• Development normal prior to onset, but subsequent development retarded

• Neurological deficit 80%

• Spasm – Generalized flexion or rarely extension myoclonus

• EEG – Hypsarrythmias

• Good response to corticosteroid drugs

• Seizure usually remit on therapy or spontaneously

• Long term prognosis poor, with mental retardation and continuing epilepsy

Page 11: Management of epilepsy in children

Causes of Infantile spasm

• Disorder of cerebral development

• Neurocutaneous syndromes– Tuberous sclerosis

– Sturge- Weber Syndrome

– Neurofibromatosis

• Metabolic

• Degenerative

• Perinatal and postnatal – Hypoxic anoxic

encephalopathy

– Cerebral infraction

– Intra-cerebral Hemorrhage

– Cerebral trauma

– Cerebral tumor

– Maternal toxemia

– Metabolic and endocrine disorders

• Idiopathic - 40%

Page 12: Management of epilepsy in children

Lanox Gastaut Syndrome

• Onset in childhood

• Severe epileptic disorder with multiple seizure type , myoclonic, atypical absence, tonic and tonic clonic

• Seizure precipitated by drowsiness

• Progressive mental retardation

• Status epilepticus common ( especially non convulsive)

• EEG shows 1-2.5hz spike and wave complex, background abnormalities, no photosensitivity

• Primary (25%) and secondary (75%)

• Poor response to AED

Page 13: Management of epilepsy in children

Benign Rolandic epilepsy

• Common – 15% of all

childhood epilepsy

• Age – 5-10 years

• Partial seizure involving

face oropharynx and arm,

usually with preserved

consciousness, initially

and commonly secondary

generalization

• Typically occur during sleep

• Seizure usually infrequent• Normal intelligence and

no other neurological abnormalities

• Family history• EEG – High amplitude

centrotemporal spikes• Excellent response to

AED• Remission by mid teenage

Page 14: Management of epilepsy in children

Occipital Epilepsy

• Incidence– Rare– Male 7-15 years– Family history– Febrile convulsion

• EEG– Occipital spikes

• No pathology• Excellent prognosis

• Clinical– Amaurosis– Hemianopia– Head deviation and

blinking– Complex partial or

Generalized – Postictal headache

with vomiting – Prolonged seizure

Page 15: Management of epilepsy in children

Electric status epilepticus during slow wave sleep (ESES)

• Rare 0.5% of childhood epilepsy

• Age 1-14 years

• Clinical – Seizure

– Mental retardation

– Neurological signs

– Normal intellectual before onset

– Regression with language dysfunction follows

• EEG : – Generalized spike

wave discharge occupying at least 85% of NREM sleep

• Remission by 15 years

Page 16: Management of epilepsy in children

Acquired epileptic aphasia• Rare• Male predominance• Age < 6 years• Development normal• Aphasia subacute or gradual • EEG focal spike and slow wave in slow wave

sleep• Overt seizure mild in 70%• Seizure but not EEG controlled by Drugs• Incomplete recovery of speech

Page 17: Management of epilepsy in children

Idiopathic Generalized Epilepsies• Common 10% of

epilepsies and 40% of Tonic clonic epilepsies

• Clinical – GTC, myoclonic and or absence seizure

• Marked diurnal pattern• Precipitated by

– Sleep deprivation– Menstruation– Fatigue– Stress– Alcohol– Photic stimulation

• Strong genetic basis with age specific expression

• Absence of other neurological abnormality and normal intelligence

• Generalized EEG changes 3Hz spike and wave, normal background and photosensitivity

• Excellent response to specific antiepileptic drug

Page 18: Management of epilepsy in children

Childhood absence epilepsy• Incidence:

– 3-12 years (4-8 years)– 6-8/ 100000 – Female > Male– Genetic predisposition

• Clinical– 10-100 times a day– < 15 sec– Blank stare and

unresponsiveness, clonic eyelid movements minor orofacial automatism

– Transient loss of postural tone, increase in tone

• Precipitated

– hyperventilation

– Fatigue

– Emotional upset

– boredom

– Inactivity

• Prognosis

– 40% develop GTCS at 5-10

years after the onset

Page 19: Management of epilepsy in children

Juvenile absence epilepsy

Incidence– ¼ of CAE– Male = Female – Age = 10 years

Clinical – Frequency less

– Duration more

– Less profound loss of consciousness

– 1/20th has automatism

– 16% has myoclonic seizure

– 80% develop GTC on awakening or rarely in sleep

EEG– background normal– Generalized spike wave

discharge with frontal predominance 3.5-4Hz

– Precipitated by hyperventilation or sleep deprivation

Prognosis– 80% responds to treatment– Both absence and TC

seizure may persist in adulthood

Page 20: Management of epilepsy in children

Juvenile myoclonic epilepsy

• Incidence– 5-10% of epilepsy

• Clinical– Typical Absence 10 years

->

– Myoclonic jerks in morning ->

– GTC on awakening

– Precipitated by light and flash

• EEG

– 4-6Hz polyspike and slow

waves generalized

discharges for 20 sc

– Normal background

• Prognosis

– 90% become seizure free

with medication

– Relapses on stopping

medication

Page 21: Management of epilepsy in children

Epilepsy with generalized tonic clonic seizure on awakening

• Incidence– 15-40% epilepsy– Male predominance– 12% family history– Age 9-25years (puberty

peak)• Clinical

– Within 2 hours of awakening, sleep deprivation and alcohol

– Absence in 50%– Myoclonic seizure 30%– GTCS without aura may

precedes myoclonic or absence

• EEG– Generalized spike wave

activity 2.5-4Hz– Polyspike and wave activity– Photosensitive and

hyperventilation may increases

• Prognosis– 65% seizure controlled on

medication– 80% relapses off

medication

Page 22: Management of epilepsy in children

Other IGE

• Eyelid myoclonia with typical absence

• Epilepsy with myoclonic absence

• Benign myoclonic epilepsy of infancy

• Benign familial myoclonus

• Perioral myoclonia with absence

Page 23: Management of epilepsy in children

Childhood myoclonic epilepsy

• Cryptogenic myoclonic epilepsy

• Benign myoclonic epilepsy of infancy

• Syndrome of severe myoclonic epilepsy of infancy

• Syndrome of myoclonic status in non progressive encephalopathy

• Myoclonic astatic epilepsy

Page 24: Management of epilepsy in children

Progressive myoclonic epilepsy

• Lafora body disease

• Unverricht Lundenborg disease

• Mitochondrial encephalopathy

• Neonatal ceroid lipofuscinosis

• Dentato- rubro pallido luysian atrophy

Page 25: Management of epilepsy in children

Febrile Seizure

Simple Febrile• Common 2-4% of children• Peak age of onset – 2-4

years• Seizure at the onset of

febrile illness• Tonic clonic form• Recurrence in 30-50%• Rule of 5 - <5year age,

<5min duration, < 5/years

Complex febrile

• duration greater than 30 min,

• focal features,

• recur in 24 hours

Poor prognosis– Onset <13months

– Associated neurological disease

– Complex convulsion

Page 26: Management of epilepsy in children

Febrile seizure Rx

• No medication for single febrile seizure

• Diazepam orally for recurrent febrile seizure

• Valproate or phenobarb for recurrent febrile

seizure

Page 27: Management of epilepsy in children

COMMON DIAGNOSTIC COMMON DIAGNOSTIC PROBLEMSPROBLEMS

GENNERALIZED CONVULSIVE ATTACKGENNERALIZED CONVULSIVE ATTACK LOSS OF AWARENESSLOSS OF AWARENESS DROP ATTACKSDROP ATTACKS TRANSIENT FOCAL NEUROLOGICAL TRANSIENT FOCAL NEUROLOGICAL

DYSFUNCTIONDYSFUNCTION PSYCHIC EXPERIENCESPSYCHIC EXPERIENCES EPISODIC PHENOMENA IN SLEEPEPISODIC PHENOMENA IN SLEEP PROLONGED CONFUSIONAL OR FUGE PROLONGED CONFUSIONAL OR FUGE

STATESTATE

Page 28: Management of epilepsy in children

COMMON DIAGNOSTIC PROBLEMSCOMMON DIAGNOSTIC PROBLEMS

GENNERALIZED CONVULSIVE ATTACKGENNERALIZED CONVULSIVE ATTACK

NON EPILEPTIC ATTACK NON EPILEPTIC ATTACK DISORDERDISORDER

SYNCOPE WITH SECONDARY SYNCOPE WITH SECONDARY JERKINGJERKING

EPISODIC INVOLUNTRY EPISODIC INVOLUNTRY MEVEMENT DISORDERSMEVEMENT DISORDERS

HYPEREKPLEXIAHYPEREKPLEXIA

Page 29: Management of epilepsy in children

NON EPILEPTIC ATTACK DISORDERNON EPILEPTIC ATTACK DISORDER

EPILEPSY NEAD

PRECIPITATING RARE STRESS, EMOTION

ATTACK IN SLEEP COMMON RARE

ONSET SHORT LONG

AURA STEREOTYPED FEAR, PANIC

SPEECH CRY, GRUNT SEMI-VOLUNTARY

MOVEMENTS TYPICAL ATYPICAL

INJURY TONGUE BITE,FALL

DIRECTEDVIOLENCE

CONSCIOUSNESS LOSS COMPLETE VARIABLE

INCONTINENCE COMMON RARE

DURATION SHORT LONG

Page 30: Management of epilepsy in children

LOSS OF AWARENESS (BLACKOUT)LOSS OF AWARENESS (BLACKOUT)

SYNCOPESYNCOPE TRANSIENT CEREBRAL ISCHEMIATRANSIENT CEREBRAL ISCHEMIA MICROSLEEPMICROSLEEP PANIC ATTACKPANIC ATTACK HYPOGYCEMIAHYPOGYCEMIA NEUROLOGICAL DISORDERSNEUROLOGICAL DISORDERS

ARNOLD-CHIARI MALFORMATIONARNOLD-CHIARI MALFORMATION THIRD VENTRICULAR TUMORTHIRD VENTRICULAR TUMOR HEAD INJURYHEAD INJURY

NON-EPILEPTIC ATTACK DISORDERSNON-EPILEPTIC ATTACK DISORDERS

Page 31: Management of epilepsy in children

SYNCOPESYNCOPE

EVIDENCE OF PRECIPITAING FACTORSEVIDENCE OF PRECIPITAING FACTORS

LIGHHEADEDNESS, DIZZINESS, NAUSEALIGHHEADEDNESS, DIZZINESS, NAUSEA

TINNITUS, BILATERAL LOSS OF VISISONTINNITUS, BILATERAL LOSS OF VISISON

COLLAPSECOLLAPSE

PALLORPALLOR

SWEATING, SUBSEQUENT FLUSHINGSWEATING, SUBSEQUENT FLUSHING

RPID RECOVERY WHEN SUPINERPID RECOVERY WHEN SUPINE

Page 32: Management of epilepsy in children

TRANSIENT FOCAL TRANSIENT FOCAL NEUROLOGICAL DYSFUNCTIONNEUROLOGICAL DYSFUNCTION

FOCAL SEIZURESFOCAL SEIZURES VASCULAR DISORDERS - TIA'S *VASCULAR DISORDERS - TIA'S * MIGRAINE, SDH, LARGE ANEURISM MIGRAINE, SDH, LARGE ANEURISM DEMYELINATIONDEMYELINATION TUMOR, RAISED ICTTUMOR, RAISED ICT METABOLIC - HYPOGLYCEMIA, TOXICMETABOLIC - HYPOGLYCEMIA, TOXIC PSYCHOLOGICALPSYCHOLOGICAL OTHER - VERTIGO, HEADACHE, TGA, VOMITING, OTHER - VERTIGO, HEADACHE, TGA, VOMITING,

ABDOMINAL PAINABDOMINAL PAIN

Page 33: Management of epilepsy in children

TRANSIENT PSYCHIC DISTURBANCETRANSIENT PSYCHIC DISTURBANCE

• COMPLEXCOMPLEX PARTIAL, FOCAL PSYCHIC,POSTICTALPARTIAL, FOCAL PSYCHIC,POSTICTAL

• BREATH HOLDINGBREATH HOLDING

• HYPERVENTILATION ATTACKHYPERVENTILATION ATTACK

• PANIC ATTACKPANIC ATTACK

• EPISODIC DYSCONTROL SYNDROMEEPISODIC DYSCONTROL SYNDROME

• EMOTIONAL ATTACKSEMOTIONAL ATTACKS

• TANTRUMTANTRUM

• ABREACTION OR SYMBOLIC ATTACKABREACTION OR SYMBOLIC ATTACK

• DELIBERATE SIMULATIONDELIBERATE SIMULATION

• SHUDDERING ATTACKSSHUDDERING ATTACKS

• MALINGERINGMALINGERING

Page 34: Management of epilepsy in children

What blood test in epilepsy?

• Complete blood count

• Blood sugar fasting and post pandrial

• Serum creatinine

• S. Calcium , magnesium, and sodium

• SGPT, bilirubin

Page 35: Management of epilepsy in children

EEG in Epilepsy

• To confirm the diagnosis

• To classify the type of seizure

• To locate the focus of discharge

• To find out triggering factors

• To find out associated brain disease

• To monitor anticonvulsant

Page 36: Management of epilepsy in children

When to do Neuroimaging?

• Focal onset or focal neurological sign

• Features of raised intracranial pressure

• Uncontrolled seizure

• Features of focal lesion in EEG

Page 37: Management of epilepsy in children

CT or MRI

• CT

– Calcification

– Acute hemorrhage

– Emergency

• MRI– Tumor– Old hematoma– AVM– Temporal atrophy– Granuloma

Page 38: Management of epilepsy in children

AED after first provoked seizure

• Don’t start– idiopathic generalized

tonic-clonic seizure

– no prior acute symptomatic seizure

– no spikes on EEG

– no sibling with epilepsy

– no status epilepticus

– no Todd's paralysis

– benign childhood epilepsy

• Start– remote symptomatic seizure

– partial seizure

– prior acute symptomatic seizure

– spikes on EEG

– sibling with epilepsy

– first seizure was status epilepticus

– Todd's paralysis

– first seizure during sleep

Page 39: Management of epilepsy in children

How to start drug treatment?

• Confirm the diagnosis

• Use single anticonvulsant

• Use proper doses

• Loading dose of certain drug in emergency

• Build up dose of others

• Use minimal effective dose

Page 40: Management of epilepsy in children

A. Partial seizures (without or with

secondary generalization) • First choice:

– Carbamazepine, phenytoin

• Second choice: – Gabapentin, valproate, lamotrigine, topiramate,

vigabatrin, tiagabine

• Consider: – Phenobarbital, primidone, clonazepam, clobazam,

clorazepate, acetazolamide

Page 41: Management of epilepsy in children

B. Generalized tonic-clonic seizures

• First choice:

– Valproate, phenytoin, carbamazepine

• Second choice:

– Phenobarbital, primidone

• Consider:

– Clonazepam, clobazam

Page 42: Management of epilepsy in children

C. Childhood absence epilepsy

Before age 10 years:

• First choice: – Ethosuximide,

– valproate

• Second choice: – Lamotrigine,

– methsuximide,

– acetazolamide,

– clonazepam,

– clobazam

After age 10 years:

• First choice: – Valproate

• Consider: – Carbamazepine,

– phenytoin or

– phenobarbital (for generalized tonic-clonic seizures if valproate or lamotrigine not tolerated)

Page 43: Management of epilepsy in children

D. Juvenile myoclonic epilepsy

• First choice:– Valproate

• Second choice: – Lamotrigine, – phenobarbital, – primidone, clonazepam

• Consider: – Carbamazepine, – phenytoin, – methsuximide, – acetazolamide

Page 44: Management of epilepsy in children

E. Progressive myoclonic epilepsy

• First choice:

– Valproate

• Second choice:

– Valproate + clonazepam,

– clobazam,

– phenobarbital

Page 45: Management of epilepsy in children

F. The Lennox-Gastaut and related syndromes

• First choice:

– Valproate

• Second choice:

– Clonazepam,

– phenobarbital,

– lamotrigine,

– ethosuximide

• Consider: – Methsuximide,

– clobazam,

– nitrazepam,

– ACTH or steroids,

– pyridoxine,

– ketogenic diet,

– felbamate

Page 46: Management of epilepsy in children

G. Infantile spasms

• First choice: – ACTH or steroids

• Second choice: – Valproate,

– vigabatrin

• Consider: – Clonazepam,

– nitrazepam,

– pyridoxine

Page 47: Management of epilepsy in children

H. Benign epilepsy of childhood with centrotemporal spikes

• First choice: – Carbamazepine, – valproate

• Second choice: – Clobazam, – phenytoin

• Consider: – Phenobarbital,– primidone

Page 48: Management of epilepsy in children

I. Neonatal seizures

• First choice: – Phenobarbital

• Second choice: – Phenytoin

• Consider: – Clonazepam, – primidone, – valproate, – pyridoxine

Page 49: Management of epilepsy in children

What drug to choose?

Focal/GTCS CBZ, PHY, VALPHB,

Absence VAL, EHT, BNZ

Myoclonic VAL, CLN

Page 50: Management of epilepsy in children

Drug level monitoring

• To maintain

minimum dose

• Uncontrolled

epilepsy

• Noncompliance

• Polytherapy

• Drug interaction

• Toxicity

• Hepatic diseases

• Pregnancy

Page 51: Management of epilepsy in children

What is the chance of remission?

• 50% Remission off treatment for 20

years

• 20% Remission on treatment

• 30% Seizure on treatment

Page 52: Management of epilepsy in children

Good prognostic signs• Granuloma• Early posttraumatic epilepsy• Mild infrequent seizure• Secondary systemic or toxic

seizure• Benign rolandic epilepsy• Primary generalized epilepsy• Absence seizure• Early treatment

Page 53: Management of epilepsy in children

Bad prognostic signs

• Diffuse cerebral disease

• Late posttraumatic epilepsy

• Multiple seizure types

• Complex partial seizure

• Long untreated seizure

• History of Status in the past

Page 54: Management of epilepsy in children

When to stop treatment

• Primary generalized seizure with normal

EEG for 2-3 seizure free years

• Taper slowly

• Severe brain damaged needs life long

treatment

• Short course following medical disorder

Page 55: Management of epilepsy in children

Intractable seizures

• 20-30% of epilepsy

• Poor compliance

• Inadequate drug doses

• Improper choice of drug

• Inappropriate combination of drugs

• Misdiagnosis of seizure or seizure type

Page 56: Management of epilepsy in children

New antiepileptic drugs

1. Clobazam

2. Gabapantin

3. Lamotrigine

4. Topiramate

5. Vigabatrin

6. Falbamate

Page 57: Management of epilepsy in children

Clobazam

• Benzodiazepine, anxiolytic

• Weak antiepileptic

• For add on therapy

• Less side effect

• Can be used in children with primay and febrile seizure

• Dose: 0.1-0.5mg/Kg/dayBD

Page 58: Management of epilepsy in children

Gabapantine

• First pass metabolism

• No interaction

• Drug level monitoring not required

• Can be use in high doses

• Renal and hepatic failure and transplant patient

Page 59: Management of epilepsy in children

Lamotrigine

• Broad spectrum antiepileptic

• Skin rash common, no other significant toxicity

• Can be used in all age as primary and secondary drug

• Dose: 0.5-10mg/kg in two divided dose

Page 60: Management of epilepsy in children

Topiramate

• GABArgic

• Efficacy: Partial seizure

• Side effects: fatigue, nervousness, difficulty with concentration, tremor, weight loss, renal stone

• Dose: 50-400mg in two divided doses

Page 61: Management of epilepsy in children

Status epilepticus causes

Drug withdrawal 25

Alcohol withdraw 25

Cerebrovascular: 22

Metabolic: 10

Systemic infection 12

Trauma 15

Drug toxicity 15

CNS infection 12

Tumor 8

Congenital lesion 8

Prior Epilepsy 33

Idiopathic 30

Page 62: Management of epilepsy in children

Status epilepticus management

• ABCD

• Blood: Electrolytes, CBC, Calcium, Magnesium, BUN, Liver function Anticonvulsant level, Alcohol, Toxicology screen

• If hypoglycemia suspected, give 50% glucose

• Give Thiamine 100 mg iv

• Lorazepam 0.1 mg/kg iv

• Phenytoin 20 mg/kg iv, 50 mg/min

Page 63: Management of epilepsy in children

Status management cont.

If seizure persists:

• Phenobarbital 20 mg/kg iv at 50 to 100 mg/min

• Review lab result and correct any abnormality

• CT/MRI: bleed, infection, AV malformations, neoplasm

• Lumbar puncture: if CNS infection suspected

• Blood cultures: Sepsis

For refractory seizure:• Intubation, EEG

monitoring and Pentobarbital 5-15 mg/kg loading over 3 minutes, 0.5 to 5 mg/kg/hr drip or

• Midazolam (Versed) 0.15-0.20 mg/kg loading, then 0.06-1.1 mg/kg/hr drip

• Propofol 1-2 mg/kg loading, then 3-10 mg/kg/h

Page 64: Management of epilepsy in children

Surgical Procedures

• Resection of epileptic focus

– cortical resection

– temporal lobectomy

– Amygdylohippocampectomy

• Corpus callosotomy

• Hemispherictomy