pediatric neurologic
emergencies
may 2002 core rounds
contents
seizures
approaches to
febrile seizure
new onset non-febrile seizure
established seizure disorder with recurrence
neonatal seizures
status epilepticus
investigation, treatment, disposition
headache
discussion (as little evidence to support)
migraine treatment
imaging indications
case 1
2
year old
parents shaking episode lasting 10 mins
EMS called - child no longer shaking
V/S - BP 105/60 HR 100 RR 18 Sat N T39
approach?
well looking child
first event
multiple events
sick looking child
case 2
8
year old
parents describe good history for tonic-clonic activity
lasting 2 mins
1st event
post event confusion - improving
in ED - V/S N, N sensorium, N neuro exam
otherwise healthy, no meds, no allergies
approach?
case 3
16
year old
known seizure disorder, on phenytoin
typical seizure presenting complaint
V/S N, neuro N, otherwise looks well
approach?
case 4
2
week old
parents - doesnt look right, mouth opening and
closing
one episode lasting 1 minute
child not interested in feeding, sleepy
V/S - BP 90/50 HR 130 RR 38 sat N T 37.8
otherwise normal exam
approach?
definitions
febrile
seizure NIH defn - event of
infancy/childhood, typically between age
3mo and 5yrs, with no evidence intracranial
infection or defined cause
epilepsy
- two or more seizures not
provoked by a specific event such as fever,
trauma, infection, or chemical change
definitions
neonatal
seizure in first 28 days of life
(typically first few days)
status
epilepticus
seizure lasting >30 mins
NB rosen 5-10 mins
sequential seizures without regain LOC >30min
classification
generalized
LOC
tonic, clonic, tonic-clonic, myoclonic, atonic, absence
partial
focal onset
simple partial no LOC
complex partial LOC
partial secondarily generalized
unclassified
etiology
infectious
metabolic
traumatic
toxic
neoplastic
epileptic
other
differential diagnosis
syncope
breath
holding
sleep disorders (eg. narcolepsy)
paroxysmal movement disorder
tics,tremors
migraines
psychogenic
seizures
approach to febrile seizures
the numbers
epidemiology
age 3mo 5yrs
peak age 9-20 mo
2-5% children will have before age 5
25-40% will have family history
80 97% simple
3 - 20% complex
simple febrile seizure
<
15 mins
no focal features
no greater than 1 episode in 24h
neurologically and developmentally normal
complex febrile seizure
>15
min
febrile epilepticus >30min or recurrent without
regaining consciousness > 30min
focal
recurrence
within 24h
what do parents want to
know?
recurrence
risk recurrence 25-50%
risk recurrence after 2nd 50%
most recurrences within 6-12 mo
risk
(20% within same febrile illness)
of epilepsy
2-3% (baseline 1%)
increased in
family history of epilepsy
abnormal developmental status
complex febrile seizure
neonatal seizure
brief
and subtle
eye blinking
mouth/tongue movements
bicycling motion to limbs
typically
szs cant be provoked/consoled
autonomic changes
EEG less predictable
neonatal seizure
etiology
hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy
Presents within first day
congenital CNS anomalies
intracranial hemorrhage
electrolyte abnormalities hypoglycemia and
hypocalcemia
infections
drug withdrawal
pyrodoxine deficiency
status epilepticus
definition
deizure lasting >30 mins
NB Rosen 5-10 mins
sequential seizures without regain LOC >30min
mortality
in pediatric status epilepticus 4%
morbidity may be as high as 30%
SE treatment considerations
ABCs
brief
directed Hx and Px
glucose
antibiotics/antivirals
if meningitis/encephalitis considered
SE treatment
1st
line anticonvulsants
IV
lorazepam 0.1mg/kg
diazepam 0.2 mg/kg
midazolam 0.2 mg/kg
rectal diazepam
2-5 yrs 0.5 mg/kg
6-11 yrs 0.3 mg/kg
>12 yrs 0.2 mg/kg
IM, intranasal, buccal midazolam
SE treatment
2nd
line agents
phenytoin 20 mg/kg @ 1mg/kg/min (upto 50 mg/min)
fosphenytoin 15-20 PE/kg @ 3 mg/kg/min (upto 150
mg/min)
3rd
line agents
phenobarbital 20mg/kg @ 100mg/min
repeat prn 5-10mg/kg
maximum 40 mg/kg or 1 gram
refractory SE treatment
consider
midazolam
0.2 mg/kg bolus
then 1-10 mcg/kg/min infusion
induce
barbiturate coma
pentobarbital 5-15 mg/kg @ 25 mg/min
then 1-5 mg/kg/hour
others
valproic acid
paraldehyde, chloral hydrate
propofol, inhalational anesthesia, paralysis
lidocaine
approach stable post sz
history
pre-seizure
what was child doing when attack occurred
precipitants fever, trauma, poisoning, drug/med use
aura
deizure
what movements incl. eyes
how long
LOC?
consequences resp distress, incontinence, injury
post seizure
Post-ictal
approach to stable patient
physical
directed towards
systemic disease
infection
toxic exposure
focal neuro signs
laboratory
blood
glucose?
electrolytes?
magnesium, calcium?
anything
at all?
what about first time seizures? recurrent?
laboratory
yes
if
neonatal
abnormal mental status persistent
diabetics, renal disease
diuretic use
dehydration
malnourishment
laboratory
septic
work-up (CBC, BC, urine C+S, CXR, LP)
as indicated
sick child
< 12 - 18 mo
therapeutic
drug levels
other
ABG
toxicologic screen
TORCH, ammonia, amino acids in neonate
CPK, lactate, prolactin ?confirm seizure?
lumbar puncture
patients
at greatest risk for meningitis
under 18 months of age
seizure in the ED
focal or prolonged seizure
seen a physician within the past 48 hours
other
indications
concern about follow-up
prior treatment with antibiotics
The American Academy
of Pediatrics
strongly consider in infants under 12 months of age with a first
febrile seizure
neuroimaging
WHO?
which patients?
WHAT?
CT vs. MRI
ultrasound in neonates
WHEN?
emergent vs. elective
ACEP guidelines - >6 yo
consensus indication for non-contrast CT
first time seizure patients
if suspect structural lesion
partial onset seizure
age > 40
no other identified cause
recurrent seizure patients
change in pattern
prolonged post-ictal period
worsening mental status
neuroimaging
predictors of abnormal findings of computed tomography of the head in
pediatric patients presenting with seizures
Warden CR - Ann Emerg Med - 01-Apr-1997; 29(4): 518-23
retrospective case series
predicts CT scan results normal if
no underlying high-risk condition
malignancy, NCT, recent CHI, or recent CSF shunt revision
older than 6 months
sustained a seizure of 15 minutes or less
no new-onset focal neurologic deficit
not prospectively validated
emergent EEG?
not
generally available on emergent basis
but consider in..
persistent altered mental status (?non
convulsive status epilepticus)
paralyzed patients
pharmacologic coma
disposition
can
be discharged home if
single seizure
stable, returning to baseline neuro status
no underlying condition/cause requiring
treatment in hospital
arranged follow-up
EEG 1st non-febrile seizure
follow-up
EEG
within 24h
Lancet 1998;352:1007-11
improved pick-up 51% vs 34%
? how soon do we get ours ?
inter-ictal EEGs often normal
neuro may do sleep deprivation study (provocation)
absence epilepsy and infantile spasms are invariably
associated with an abnormal EEG
spike and wave 3HZ
idiopathic seizure
recurrence
risk stratification
normal EEG 25%
abN EEG 60%
2nd seizure 75%
neuroimaging
MRI
not
superior
emergently available
?defer
imaging until follow-up MRI
available in low risk patients?
treatment
correct
underlying pathology, if any
antipyretics ineffective in febrile seizure
anti-epileptic choice often trial and error
no anti-epileptic 100% effective
febrile seizure diazepam, phenobarbital, valproic acid
Currently AAP does not recommend
in
neonatal - phenobarbital
generalized TC phenytoin, phenobarbital, carbamazepine, valproic acid,
primidone
absence ethosuximide, valproic acid
new anti-epileptics felbamate, gabapentin, lamotrigine, topiramate,
tiagabine, vigabatrine
consultation with neurologist
pediatric headache
case 5
14
year old
mothers chief complaint - having headaches all the
time, getting worse, this is not normal!! etc. etc..
V/S N
looks in discomfort but otherwise well
approach?
treatment
imaging?
classification
classify
acute
based on temporal pattern
headaches
any febrile illness, sinus/dental infection, intracranial
infection/bleed (AVM,SAH,trauma)
acute
recurrent
chronic progressive
chronic non-progressive
tension, psychogenic, post-traumatic, ocular refractive
error
acute recurrent headache
migraine
other
cluster headache typically >10 yo
sinusitis
vascular malformation
migraine - terminology
classic migraine
biphasic
neuro aura
headache, N/V, anorexia, photophobia
either unilateral (older) / bilateral(younger) or both
common migraine
malaise, dizziness, N/V, feels and looks sick
unilateral/bilateral
migraine equivalent/complicated migraine
transient neuro deficits
+/- headache
migraine variants
Cyclic N/V, abdo pain
BPV
migraine treatment
very
little supporting evidence for pharmacologic
treatment in children compared to adults
classes of medication
acetaminophen
NSAIDS
phenothiazines (dopamine antagonists)
dihydroergotamine
triptans
the simple stuff
acetaminophen
15 mg/kg PO 30mg/kg PR
ibuprofen 10 mg/kg PO
Hamalainen ML Ibuprofen or acetaminophen for the acute treatment
of migraine in children: A double-blind, randomized, placebocontrolled, crossover study
Neurology 48:103-107, 1997
N = 88 age 4-16
relief at 2 hours
acetaminophen 54%
ibuprofen 68%
other NSAIDS
naproxen
5-7 mg/kg PO
no pediatric evidence
ketorolac
IV 0.5 mg/kg (max 30mg dose)
not studied in pediatric migraine
not approved <16 yo
Houck CS Safety of intravenous ketorolac in children and cost savings with a unit
dosing system. J Pediatr - 01-Aug-1996; 129(2): 292-6
1747 children
0.2% hypersensitivity
0.1% renal complications (in patients with renal disease)
0.05% gi bleed
dihydroergotamine
not
approved
?dose 0.1 0.5 mg IV
not studied in emergency population
Linder SL Treatment of childhood migraine with dihydroergotamine
mesylate Headache - 1994 Nov-Dec; 34(10): 578-80
N = 30
inpatient protocol
IV DHE and PO metoclopramide average 5 doses!
80% response
phenothiazines
again
no studies
metoclopramide
1-2 mg/kg IV (max 10mg)
prochloperazine 0.1 0.15 mg/kg IV/IM/PO/PR
(max 10mg)
children
may be more susceptible to EPS
? pre-treat with benadryl
triptans
mostly
studied in adolescent groups
sumitriptan subcutaneous 0.06mg/kg
Linder S: Subcutaneous sumatriptan in the clinical setting: The first 50 consecutive
patients with acute migraine in a pediatric neurology office practice. Headache 36:419
422, 1996
N = 50 age 6-18
78% effective at 2 hours
6% recurrence
sumitriptan
intranasal
long term treatment studies done
no emergent studies
triptans
PO
studies plagued by high placebo response
chronic progressive headache
least
common presentation
most
worrisome for increased ICP
pseudotumor cerebri
space occupying lesion
imaging indications? discuss
lack
of evidence to help
small studies lack power to guide decision
making
MRI
preferred in non-urgent indication
imaging indications? discuss
classically
based on historical and physical
sudden severe headache
rapid increase over days - weeks
chronic progressive
suggestive of increased ICP
severe nocturnal headache (wakes or upon waking), changes in pain with
position, coughing
following head trauma
persistent neuro findings
? include migraine equivalents ?
growth abnormality
age (? <3 ?)