Read Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult Online

Authors: Jeffrey J. Schaider,Adam Z. Barkin,Roger M. Barkin,Philip Shayne,Richard E. Wolfe,Stephen R. Hayden,Peter Rosen

Tags: #Medical, #Emergency Medicine

Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (640 page)

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TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL
  • Protect the airway
  • Oxygen
  • Support breathing as needed
  • Cautions:
    • Keep child from incurring injury while actively convulsing
    • Respiratory insufficiency and apnea occur secondary to overaggressive treatment with benzodiazepines
    • Simple febrile seizures are self-limited and generally require no anticonvulsant therapy or ventilatory support
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
  • Support the airway and breathing
  • Benzodiazepines rarely needed:
    • Prolonged seizures or compromised patients
    • Lorazepam, diazepam, or midazolam
    • Rectal diazepam or nasal midazolam may be easily administered with good efficacy
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
  • Rarely is pharmacologic intervention required; usually self-limited
  • Seizures refractory to benzodiazepines:
    • Phenytoin or fosphenytoin
    • Phenobarbital
    • Workup to exclude other etiologies
  • Administer antipyretics acutely and routinely for at least the next 24 hr:
    • Acetaminophen and/or ibuprofen (may use both)
  • Appropriate antibiotic treatment for specific bacterial disease if identified
  • Reassure and education of parents is essential
MEDICATION
  • Acetaminophen: 10–15 mg/kg/dose PO, PR; do not exceed 5 doses/24 h
  • Diazepam: 0.2 mg/kg IV (max. 10 mg); 0.2–0.5 mg/kg PR (max. 20 mg)
  • Fosphenytoin: 20 mg/kg IV over 20 min
  • Ibuprofen: 10 mg/kg PO
  • Lorazepam: 0.1 mg/kg IV (max. 5 mg)
  • Midazolam: 0.05–0.1 mg/kg IV; 0.2 mg/kg buccal/IN/IM (max. 7.5 mg)
  • Phenobarbital: 15–20 mg/kg IV over 20 min or IM; monitor for respiratory depression
  • Phenytoin: 15–20 mg/kg IV over 30–45 min
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
  • Recurrent or prolonged seizures
  • Fever with source not appropriately treated as outpatient
Discharge Criteria
  • Simple febrile seizures:
    • Normal neurologic exam
    • Source of fever is appropriately treated as outpatient
  • Reassurance to parents
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS

Schedule follow-up with primary care physician

PEARLS AND PITFALLS
  • Although aggressive treatment of fever with antipyretics is often recommended, there is no evidence that this reduces seizure recurrence
  • Oral diazepam during febrile illness may reduce risk of recurrence; prophylactic anticonvulsants with other anticonvulsants rarely indicated—such treatment is controversial and to be considered only after extensive discussion
ADDITIONAL READING
  • Barata I. Pediatric seizures.
    Crit Decisions Emerg Med
    . 2005;19(6):1–21.
  • Blumstein MD, Friedman MJ. Childhood seizures.
    Emerg Med Clin North Am
    . 2007;25:1061–1086.
  • Hirabayashi Y, Okumura A, Kondo T, et al. Efficacy of a diazepam suppository at preventing febrile seizure recurrence during a single febrile illness.
    Brain Dev
    . 2009;31:414–418.
  • Offringa M, Newton R. Prophylactic drug management for febrile seizures in children.
    Cochrane Database Syst Rev.
    2012;4:CD003031.
  • Steering Committee on Quality Improvement and Management; Subcommittee on Febrile Seizures American Academy of Pediatrics. Febrile seizures: Clinical practice guideline for the long-term management of the child with simple febrile seizures.
    Pediatrics
    . 2008;121(6):1281–1286.
  • Strengell T, Uhari M, Tarkka R, et al. Antipyretic agents for preventing recurrences of febrile seizures: Randomized controlled trial.
    Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med
    . 2009;163(9):799–804.
  • Subcommittee on Febrile Seizures; American Academy of Pediatrics. Neurodiagnostic evaluation of the child with a simple febrile seizure.
    Pediatrics
    . 2011;127(2):389–394.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
  • Anticholinergic Poisoning
  • Seizures, Pediatric
  • Fever, Pediatric
CODES
ICD9
  • 780.31 Febrile convulsions (simple), unspecified
  • 780.32 Complex febrile convulsions
ICD10
  • R56.0 Febrile convulsions
  • R56.00 Simple febrile convulsions
  • R56.01 Complex febrile convulsions
SEIZURE, PEDIATRIC
John P. Santamaria
BASICS
DESCRIPTION

Sudden, abnormal discharges of neurons resulting in a change in behavior or function

ETIOLOGY
  • Febrile seizures
  • Infection
  • Idiopathic
  • Trauma
  • Toxicologic:
    • Ingestion
    • Drug action
    • Drug withdrawal
  • Metabolic:
    • Hypoglycemia
    • Hypocalcemia
    • Hypo/hypernatremia
    • Inborn errors of metabolism
  • Perinatal hypoxia
  • Intracranial hemorrhage
  • CNS structural anomaly or malformation
  • Degenerative disease
  • Psychogenic
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
Neonates
  • Subtle abnormal repetitive motor activity:
    • Facial movements
    • Eye deviations
    • Eyelid fluttering
    • Lip smacking/sucking
  • Respiratory alterations
  • Apnea
  • Seizure activity:
    • Focal or generalized tonic seizures
    • Focal or multifocal clonic seizures
    • Myoclonic movements
  • Generalized problems (metabolic, infection, etc.) may present with focal seizures
Older Infants and Children
  • Generalized seizures:
    • Tonic--clonic
    • Tonic
    • Clonic
    • Myoclonic
    • Atonic (“drop”)
    • Absence
  • Partial or focal seizures:
    • Simple:
      • Consciousness maintained
    • Simple partial seizures:
      • Motor, sensory, and/or cognitive symptoms
      • Motor activity focal: 1 part or side
      • Paresthesias, metallic tastes, and visual or auditory hallucinations
    • Complex:
      • Consciousness impaired
      • Complex partial seizure
    • Simple partial seizure progresses with impaired consciousness:
      • Aura precedes altered consciousness; auditory, olfactory, or visual hallucination
      • May generalize
  • Status epilepticus:
    • Generalized is most common
    • Sustained partial seizures
    • Absence seizures
    • Persistent confusion; postictal period
History
  • Determine whether seizures are febrile or afebrile
  • Determine type of seizure:
    • Partial vs. generalized
    • Presence of eye findings, aura, movements, cyanosis
    • Duration
    • State of consciousness, postictal state
    • Predisposing conditions/history/family history (syndromes with a genetic component)
BOOK: Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult
11.03Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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