s eizure recognition, seizure types, f irst a id and s afety charuta joshi mbbs, frcpc director of...

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SEIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, FIRST AID AND SAFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

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Page 1: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

SEIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, FIRST AID

AND SAFETYCharuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC

Director of pediatric epilepsyUIHC

Page 2: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Objectives

At the end of this lecture the participants will be able to:Define a seizure

Recognize different types of seizures

Define epilepsy

Know basic steps involved in seizure first aid

Name 2 different medications used on the site to treat seizures in the prehospital setting

Be familiar with ketogenic diet as therapy for seizures

Page 3: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

What is a seizureSeizure recognition

• A clinical manifestation of :• Abnormal• Excessive• Paroxysmal• Electrical discharge in neurons

Page 4: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Seizure recognition

• Stereotyped• Repetitive• If unsure video tape events• Ask pediatrician to see

Page 5: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Seizure recognition

• Spectrum of findings

Generalized seizures

Simple partial seizures

Complex partial seizures

Page 6: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Seizure recognitionsimple partial seizures

• Localization

Page 7: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Seizure recognitionGeneralized

• Absence• Myoclonic• Tonic• Generalized tonic clonic

Page 8: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

How important is it to be sure about a seizure

Page 9: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

First seizure clinic results

• 127 children• 94 were given diagnosis of epilepsy in first

seizure clinic• 36 had suffered at least one previous seizure

( 15 unrecognized by family as a seizure)• 31 – non epileptic events• Unclassified in 2

Page 10: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Differential diagnosis

Page 11: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Investigations after a first unprovoked seizure

Page 12: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Investigations

Page 13: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Yield of neuroimaging(Shinnar et al 2001)

Page 14: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

What is epilepsy

• Tendency to have recurrent, unprovoked seizures

• 2 or more unprovoked seizures separated by 24 hours

Page 15: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Questions parents have after seizures

• Will it happen again?• How long do I have to wait for a recurrence?• Could my child die during a recurrence?• Could there be brain damage due to

recurrence• If medication treatment is delayed will there

be change in long-term chance of permanent remission?

Page 16: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Recurrence risks

• Recurrence rate at 2 years 40-50%

• Half the recurrences are within 6 months of initial seizure

• 80% of 5 year recurrence risk stabilizes by 2 years out

Page 17: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Risk factors for recurrence

• Remote symptomatic etiology

• Abnormal EEG ( any spikes, generalized spike wave, focal or generalized slowing)

• Occurrence of seizure during sleep state (increases chance of recurrence)= lower morbidity than during daytime seizure

• Risk of recurrence after 2 seizures is 80%

Page 18: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Do you treat a first seizure

• Treatment reduces the risk of a second seizure by 50% at 2 years

• Immediate treatment DOES NOT reduce risk of long term seizures

• Treated and untreated groups have a 64% chance of 5 year remission at 10 years (MESS study)

• Risk of toxicity, allergic reaction, cognitive side effects

Page 19: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Risks of morbidity/ mortality due to seizures- could my child die??

• 692 children in Nova Scotia ( Camfield 2002)• Followed =20 years• 26 deaths• 1 from status• 1 from SUDEP as an adult at age 22 years

Page 20: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Could my child die

• Dutch study of childhood epilepsy ( Callenbach 2001) • 472 children followed for 5 years• 9 deaths• None from epilepsy• Connecticut study ( Berg 2004)• 613 children followed for 7.8 years• 13 deaths• 1=status• 1=SUDEP

Page 21: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

When does immediate treatment matter

• When risks of recurrent seizures outweigh benefits of withholding treatment ( adults)

• Cyanotic congenital heart disease in a child

Page 22: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Seizure first aid

• ABCs• Stay calm• Don’t leave patient alone• Lateral position if possible• Don’t restrain• Nothing in mouth• Call 911

Page 23: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Seizure safety

• Maximize quality of life• Water safety• Safety on roads• High structures• Medic alert, seizure beds, seizure dogs, baby

monitors

Page 24: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Seizure precautions

• Regular sleep• Alcohol• Infections• Photic stimulation• Substances of abuse Sports participation has not been shown to increase risk of seizures

Page 25: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Prehospital treatment of seizures

Time definition of convulsive status

epilepticus

0 5 15 30

Most seizures stop

Operational definition of

status

Optimum time to start therapy

Page 26: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Medications used for prehospital treatment

• Diazepam• Midazolam• Lorazepam

Page 27: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Prehospital treatment

Page 28: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

midazolam

Page 29: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Lorazepam

• 2mg/ml Intensol• Indicated for anxiety

Page 30: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Faves…

Page 31: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Moving on to a different discussion now…

Page 32: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Ketogenic diet

• UIHC= The only center in the state • 30-40 active patients• Dedicated dieticianKarla Mracek• Dedicated ARNPTiffany Rickertsen

Page 33: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Historical anecdotes

History• Mac Fadden 1899- magazine

Physical Culture• Medical profession= Organized

fraud• People who follow MacFadden’s

rules would live to 120 years• Since much of the body’s energy is

wasted in digesting food, if no food is provided, more energy can be applied to recovering health

• Dr Conklin-osteopath in Battlecreek , Mi

• Used diet in epilepsy

Mr MacFadden• Physical culture

Page 34: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Historical anecdotes

• Conklin’s work( intestinal epilepsy- toxin release from glands= seizures)

• Conklin’s fast 18-21 days ( or as long as they could stand it)

Page 35: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Historical anecdotes

• Dr Geyelin worked at Johns Hopkins= confirmed Conklin's findings

• Dr BJ Wilder= fat can be used to break fast= no seizures

Page 36: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Charlie foundation

Charlie Foundation• Mr Jim Abrahams • Sought help from Johns

Hopkins for his son Charlie• Seizure free today after

several medications and neurologists

Movie

Page 37: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC
Page 38: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Since then…

Page 39: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Indications

Page 40: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Mechanisms of actionNot exactly known

• Ketone bodies= antiepilepsy properties• PUFAs= membrane stabilization• Antioxidative/ antiinflammatory• Uncoupling of oxidative

phosphorylation( better energy utilization)

Page 41: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Types of ketogenic diet

• Classic ketogenic diet= 4:1 ratio• MCT oil diet ( less restrictive)• Modified Atkins diet=15-20 gm carbs/day• Low Glycemic index diet=60 gm carbs/day

Page 42: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Ketogenic diet

Most kids not fat… Results• 50-60% improve• Almost 100% improve –

Doose , GLUT1ContraindicatedFatty acid oxidation defect

Page 43: S EIZURE RECOGNITION, SEIZURE TYPES, F IRST A ID AND S AFETY Charuta Joshi MBBS, FRCPC Director of pediatric epilepsy UIHC

Thank You !!