DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- Patients with status epilepticus should be admitted to the ICU
- Patients with seizures secondary to underlying disease (e.g., meningitis, intracranial lesion) must be admitted for appropriate treatment and monitoring
- Patients with poorly controlled repetitive seizures should be admitted for monitoring
- Delirium tremens
Discharge Criteria
- Patient with normal workup and appropriate neurology follow-up
- Uncomplicated seizure in patient with chronic seizure disorder
- Seizure secondary to reversible cause:
- Hypoglycemia if blood sugar has stabilized
- Alcohol withdrawal if baseline mental status and no further seizures
- Simple febrile seizure
Issues for Referral
- Consider early neurology follow-up
- Anticonvulsant drug level monitoring
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
No driving until seizures are under control
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Most common cause of recurrent seizure is subtherapeutic anticonvulsant drug level
- Benzodiazepines are the 1st-line treatment to stop seizure activity
- Treat the underlying cause if identifiable
- Seizures lasting longer than 5–10 min should be treated as status epilepticus
- Valproate likely works as well as phenytoin/fosphenytoin as a second line agent in treating status epilepticus and can be administered more quickly with less chance of an adverse effect
ADDITIONAL READING
- ACEP Clinical Policies Subcommittee (Writing Committee) on Seizures; Huff JS, Melnick ER, Tomaszewski CA, et al. Clinical policy: Critical issues in the evaluation and management of adult patients presenting to the emergency department with seizures.
Ann Emerg Med.
2014;63:437--447.
- French JA, Pedley TA. Clinical practice. Initial management of epilepsy.
N Engl J Med
. 2008;359:166–176.
- Jagoda A, Gupta K. The emergency department evaluation of the adult patient who presents with a first-time seizure.
Emerg Med Clin North Am.
2011;29:41–49.
- Krumholz A, Wiebe S, Gronseth G, et al. Practice parameter: Evaluating an apparent unprovoked first seizure in adults (an evidence-based review): Report of the Quality Standards Subcommittee of the American Academy of Neurology and the American Epilepsy Society.
Neurology.
2007;69:1996–2007.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
- Headaches
- Hypertensive Emergencies
- Intracerebral Hemorrhage
- Preeclampsia/Eclampsia
- Seizure, Febrile
- Seizure, Pediatric
CODES
ICD9
- 345.00 Generalized nonconvulsive epilepsy, without mention of intractable epilepsy
- 345.90 Epilepsy, unspecified, without mention of intractable epilepsy
- 780.39 Other convulsions
ICD10
- G40.009 Local-rel idio epi w seiz of loc onst,not ntrct,w/o stat epi
- G40.409 Other generalized epilepsy and epileptic syndromes, not intractable, without status epilepticus
- R56.9 Unspecified convulsions
SEIZURE, FEBRILE
John P. Santamaria
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Occurs between 6 mo and 5 yr of age associated with fever:
- No evidence of intracranial infection or other defined CNS primary cause
- Average age of onset is 18–22 mo
- Children with previous nonfebrile seizures excluded
- Most common pediatric convulsive disorder:
- Affects 2–4% of young children in US
- Occurs in normal children with a systemic viral illness
- High-risk children:
- History of febrile seizure in immediate family members
- Delayed neurologic development
- Males
- Subgroups:
- Simple febrile seizures:
- Brief, self-limited lasting <10–15 min, resolve spontaneously
- Generalized without any focal features
- Complex febrile seizures:
- Duration >15 min
- Focal features
- More than 1 seizure within a 24-hr period
- Risk of recurrence:
- One-third of cases
- Early age of onset, history of febrile or afebrile seizures in 1st-degree relatives, and temperature <40°C during initial seizure increase the likelihood of recurrence
- Risk of subsequent epilepsy:
- Greatest for those with prior abnormal neurologic development, a complex (>15 min) 1st febrile seizure, a focal seizure, or a family history of afebrile seizures
- Only slightly greater than the general population if 1st febrile seizure is simple and neurologic development normal
- Not affected by the use of prophylactic medications
ALERT
Because this is usually self-limited, intervention must be individualized in relation to airway, breathing, and seizure management
ETIOLOGY
Common childhood infections:
- Upper respiratory illnesses
- Otitis media
- Roseola
- GI infections
- Shigella
gastroenteritis
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
- Fever
- Seizure may occur concurrent with recognition of the febrile illness
- Seizure
- Generalized tonic–clonic seizure most common:
- Tonic phase:
- Muscular rigidity
- Apnea and incontinence
- Self-limited and last only a few minutes
- Other seizure types:
- Staring with stiffness
- Limpness
- Jerking movements without prior stiffening
History
- Careful history and physical exam help confirm diagnosis and rule out other etiologies
- Symptoms/evidence of infectious illness
- Duration and pattern of fever
- Medication exposure/toxin
- Recent immunizations
- Trauma/occult trauma
- Growth pattern and developmental level
- Family history of seizures
- Complete description of seizure
Physical-Exam
- Reducing temperature may be useful in evaluation; give antipyretics early
- Evidence of infectious illness-rash, ear infection, respiratory infection, diarrhea, etc.
- Careful neurologic exam including mental status
- Presence of meningismus, bulging fontanelle, nuchal rigidity, etc.
- Evidence of focal deficit or increased ICP
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
- Routine lab studies not indicated
- Evaluate for a source of fever if serious bacterial infection is suspected:
- WBC
- UA
- Blood and urine cultures
- Lumbar puncture:
- Not routinely indicated
- Indications 12–18 mo of age:
- History or irritability, decreased feeding, lethargy
- Consider if deficient in
Haemophilus influenzae
type b or
Streptococcus pneumoniae
immunizations
- Physical signs of meningitis and/or history consistent with meningitis
- Complex seizure
- Prolonged postictal state
- Prior antibiotics altering presentation
- Abnormal mentation after postictal state
- Indications >18 mo old:
- Signs/symptoms of CNS infection present
- Electrolytes and bedside glucose in infants and children with vomiting or diarrhea
- EEG:
- Not helpful in the initial evaluation of febrile seizures
- May be indicated if developmental delay, underlying neurologic abnormality, or focal seizure
- Does not help predict recurrences or risk for later epilepsy
- Anticonvulsant levels
- Toxicology studies of blood and urine if history and physical exam suggestive
Imaging
- Chest radiograph only in patients with significant respiratory symptoms or pertinent findings on physical exam
- Head CT:
- Indicated with traumatic injuries, focal neurologic findings, or inability to exclude elevated intracranial pressure
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Febrile delirium
- Febrile shivering with pallor and perioral cyanosis
- Breath-holding spell during febrile event
- Acute life-threatening event
- Other causes of seizure:
- Afebrile seizure occurring during febrile event
- Sudden discontinuance of anticonvulsants
- Infection:
- Meningitis/encephalitis
- Acute gastroenteritis, often with dehydration
- Head trauma
- Toxicologic:
- Anticholinergics
- Sympathomimetics
- Other
- Hypoxia
- Metabolic disease
- Intracranial masses
- CNS vascular lesions