Applied Evidence

An FP’s guide to caring for patients with seizure and epilepsy

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Illicit substances such as cocaine may lower seizure threshold by their stimulatory and disruptive effects on sleep, diet, and healthy routines.

As the fetus develops, there are changes in volume of ASM distribution, renal clearance, protein binding, and hepatic metabolism, which require checking serum levels at regular intervals and making dosage adjustments.

The ongoing study evaluating Maternal Outcomes and Neurodevelopmental Effects of Antiepileptic Drugs (MONEAD)41 has led to multiple landmark studies guiding the choice of preferred ASMs during pregnancy in patients with epilepsy.42,43 This has culminated in today’s use of lamotrigine and levetiracetam as the 2 preferred agents (while avoiding valproate) in pregnant patients with epilepsy.44

Psychogenic nonepileptic seizures

Having epilepsy should not preclude patients from seeking employment and pursuing meaningful careers.

A form of conversion disorder, psychogenic nonepileptic seizures (PNES) manifests as abnormal motor or behavioral events mimicking seizures but without associated epileptiform discharges on EEG. This is observed in 10% of patients seen in epilepsy clinics and even more often in those admitted to epilepsy­ monitoring units (25%-40%).45 Diagnosis of PNES requires EEG monitoring both for confirmation and for discernment from true epileptic seizures, in particular frontal lobe epilepsy that may clinically mimic PNES. PNES often is associated with underlying psychological tensions or comorbid conditions such as depression, anxiety, or traumatic life experiences. There is no treatment for PNES per se, and its management is focused on controlling any underlying psychological comorbidities that may not always be obvious. There is some evidence suggesting that these patients experience an innate inability to verbally express their emotions and instead subconsciously resort to psychosomatics to express them in a somatic dimension.46,47

Status epilepticus

Defined as prolonged seizures (> 5 min) or 2 consecutive seizures without regaining aware ness in between, status epilepticus (SE) is a potentially fatal condition. Subclinical nonconvulsive SE, especially in comatose patients, can be diagnosed only via EEG monitoring. Untreated SE may manifest as a diagnostic dilemma in unresponsive or critically ill patients and can increase the risk for mortality. 48

Febrile seizures

Febrile seizures affect 2% to 5% of children most often in the second year of life.49 The use of preventive antiseizure medication is not recommended; instead, the key is to investigate the underlying febrile illness. Lumbar puncture is indicated if there are signs and symptoms of meningitis (25% of children with bacterial meningitis present with seizures).49 Febrile seizures often are self-limited, but there is risk for SE in up to 15% of cases.50 If convulsive febrile seizures last longer than 5 minutes, initiate benzodiazepines followed by the standard protocol used for the management of SE.51

Continue to: Epilepsy as a spectrum disorder

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