RECOGNITION AND ASSESSMENT
Symptoms and signs
- Status epilepticus is a state of seizure activity lasting for 30 min with no return to consciousness
- A generalised seizure lasting longer than 5 min is highly unlikely to stop spontaneously
Refer urgently to on-call neurology SpR any patient with a seizure lasting >5 min
Enquire
- Previous diagnosis of epilepsy
- Previous history of status epilepticus
- Recent withdrawal of anti-convulsant drug/missed medication
- Respiratory tract or urinary tract infection
- Vomiting/diarrhoea
Important underlying causes
- Infection
- meningitis
- encephalitis
- abscess
- Acute head injury
- Cerebral tumour
- Metabolic disorders
- renal failure
- hypoglycaemia
- hypercalcaemia
- Drug overdosage
- tricyclics
- phenothiazines
- theophylline
- isoniazid
- cocaine
- Acute cerebral infarction
- Alcohol intoxication/withdrawal
- Anoxic encephalopathy
Investigations
- Capillary blood glucose
- Venous blood glucose
- FBC, U&E, Calcium
- If patient has history of seizures check serum anticonvulsant concentration ONLY if there are clinical symptoms and/or signs of toxicity, suspicion of non-compliance or the patient is pregnant
- If new onset epilepsy, CT scan to exclude space-occupying lesion
Differential diagnosis
- Non-epileptic attack disorders (pseudo-seizures)
IMMEDIATE MANAGEMENT
- Treat without delay
- generalised tonic-clonic status is potentially life-threatening
- Do not attempt to put anything into patient’s mouth during a seizure, even if tongue injured
- Intubation, if necessary, requires special care
- Avoid rolling patient during a seizure unless absolutely necessary as this can cause injury to shoulder/hip joints
0-5 min
Watch and support
- Watch and assess (epileptic seizure, syncope, non-epileptic attack)
- Assess secondary metabolic factors (hypoglycaemia, electrolyte imbalance, lactic acidosis, dehydration, hyperpyrexia)
- Protect airway and support respiration if possible
- if there is any period of relaxation, try carefully to insert an airway
- Oxygen (high flow mask) 10 L/min
IV access
- Blood test - glucose, U&E, calcium, FBC
- if patient taking anticonvulsant drug, check serum anticonvulsant. See Therapeutic drug monitoring guideline
- Lorazepam 4 mg IV (diluted 1:1 with sodium chloride 0.9% or water for injection) as single slow bolus injection into large vein
- if lorazepam unavailable, give diazepam (Diazemuls®) 10 mg IV over 2 min (prolonged sedative effect)
- monitor oxygen saturation carefully for evidence of respiratory depression
- If poor nutrition/alcoholism, give parenteral thiamine as Pabrinex IV High potency injection 2 pairs of ampoules (mixed) by IV infusion in sodium chloride 0.9% 100 mL over 30 min 8-hrly
- If hypoglycaemia suspected, give glucose 20% 100 mL or glucose 10% 200 mL IV over 15 min into a large vein (care is required as these concentrations are irritant)
5-10 min
- Call neurology SpR
- Repeat lorazepam 4 mg IV if necessary (diluted 1:1 with sodium chloride 0.9% or water for injection); as a single bolus injection into a large vein
- do not exceed total dose of 8 mg of lorazepam
- if lorazepam unavailable, give diazepam (Diazemuls®) 10 mg IV slowly over 2 min repeated, if necessary, after a further 5 min
- do not exceed total dose of 20 mg of diazepam
- Monitor oxygen saturation carefully for evidence of respiratory depression
10-30 min
Seizures continue after 10 min
- If patient not already taking maintenance phenytoin therapy, give phenytoin IV with cardiac monitoring unless contraindicated. See Phenytoin IV guideline
- If phenytoin contraindicated, give levetiracetam IV. See Levetiracetam IV guideline
- If already taking maintenance phenytoin therapy, contact neurology SpR to discuss reduced dose of IV phenytoin, or use of levetiracetam. See Levetiracetam IV guideline
- Check blood gases
- If, at any stage, respiratory depression or cardiac arrhythmia is apparent or pH <7.0, contact critical care
- If still unconscious after 15 min and hypoglycaemia confirmed, repeat glucose 20% 100 mL or glucose 10% 200 mL IV over 15 min
30 minutes
Satisfactory control still not established after 30 min
- If neurology junior staff are in attendance, contact SpR or consultant for advice and arrange transfer to critical care
- Further specialised management in critical care area
Reasons for failure to respond
- Incorrect diagnosis
- Underlying cause (e.g. metabolic abnormalities) not recognised and treated
- Delay in intubation and anaesthesia
- Inappropriate use of drugs/dosage
- Delay in initiating maintenance anticonvulsant therapy
SUBSEQUENT MANAGEMENT
- All patients should now be under the care of the neurology team
Not improving
- Reconsider underlying causes
- If patient transferred to critical care and anaesthetised, arrange EEG as soon as possible after intubation to establish state of cerebral ictal activity
- If continued sedation necessary, repeat EEG 24-hrly
Improving
- Once seizure activity has ceased, place patient in recovery position
- In patients with previously diagnosed epilepsy, recommence previous AED therapy
- In newly diagnosed patients, neurologist to introduce appropriate therapy before discharge
- Continue oxygen as required. See Hypoxaemia guideline
DISCHARGE AND FOLLOW-UP
- Discharge when patient seizure-free for 48 hr and fit to leave hospital, and anti-convulsant drug therapy established
- Review existing follow-up appointments for patients with a previous history of epilepsy
- Ensure patients with no previous history have review appointment arranged
- Refer all cases to clinical nurse specialist before discharge if not already seen during admission
Date updated: 2024-02-05