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Seizures and other such Spells. 27th Annual Family Medicine Review Austin, Texas APRIL 2011 Jeffrey Clark, D.O. things that come and go. Spells. SZ Migraine TIA/Syncope. Hypoglycemia Intoxication Psychiatric (spells) Narcolepsy BPPV. The Significance of Syncope.
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Seizures and other such Spells 27th Annual Family Medicine Review Austin, Texas APRIL 2011 Jeffrey Clark, D.O.
things that come and go Spells • SZ • Migraine • TIA/Syncope Hypoglycemia Intoxication Psychiatric (spells) Narcolepsy BPPV
The Significance of Syncope The only difference between syncope and sudden death is that in one you wake up.1 1 Engel GL. Psychologic stress, vasodepressor syncope, and sudden death. Ann Intern Med 1978; 89: 403-412.
The Significance of Syncope • Some causes of syncope are potentially fatal • Cardiac causes of syncope have the highest mortality rates 1 Day SC, et al. Am J of Med 1982;73:15-23. 2 Kapoor W. Medicine 1990;69:160-175. 3 Silverstein M, Sager D, Mulley A. JAMA. 1982;248:1185-1189. 4 Martin G, Adams S, Martin H. Ann Emerg Med. 1984;13:499-504.
Structural Cardiac Abnormalities Cardiac Rhythm Abnormalities • Hx of MI / Ischemic injury • CHF / decreased EF • Valvular abnormalities • Outflow obstruction • Wall motion abn. • Bradycardia • Sick sinus • AV block • Tachycardia • VT • SVT • Long QT Syndrome
9 Day S, et al. Am J Med. 1982; 73: 15-23. 10 Stetson P, et al. PACE. 1999; 22 (part II): 782. 5 Kapoor, JAMA, 1992 6 Krahn, Circulation, 1995 7 Krahn, Cardiology Clinics, 1997. 8 Eagle K,, et al. The Yale J Biol and Medicine. 1983; 56: 1-8. 1 Kapoor, et al N Eng J Med, 1983. 2 Kapoor, Am J Med, 1991. 3 Linzer, et al. Ann Int. Med, 1997. 4 Kapoor, Medicine, 1990. * Structural Heart Disease †MRI not studied
Subclavian Stenosis Subclavian Stenosis (b) Delayed Image (a) aortogram Arch aortogram initially shows apparent absence of left vertebral artery . However, delayed imaging on the same patient, the left vertebral artery (green) fills retrogradely to supply the left subclavian artery, (confirming left subclavian steal phenomenon secondary to a severe stenosis of the proximal left subclavian artery)
Your Patient • 21 year old college student who “keeps blacking out without seizure activity”… • Evaluated in the ED this afternoon, phenytoin (Dilantin) level is “normal”... • What other tests do you want?… • What are these spells (? Seizures ?) • If so, what type of seizure is it (? And, does it matter ?) • How do you know they are not in status epilepticus? • What should your evaluation include? • How does the AED level help direct your plan? • What will you do if seizures continue in spite of management?
Will it happen again? (risk of recurrence) If it does…
Seizures: Focal vs. Generalized Onset Focal Onset (partial onset) Generalized Onset (primarily generalized) • Absence • Atonic • Myoclonic • Generalized tonic-clonic • Partial motor • Partial sensory • Complex partial • Generalized tonic clonic
Epilepsy syndromes • Juvenile myoclonic epilepsy • Benign neonatal familial convulsions • Childhood & Juvenile absence • Febrile seizures • West syndrome • Lennox-Gastaut syndrome • Rolandic epilepsy
Complex Partial Absence • Warning (aura) Often no • Duration 30-120 sec 10-20 sec • Occur (#) 1-3/day 10-20/day • Automatisms Often Occas. • Amnestic (for spell) Partially Totally • Post-ictal (tired) YES no • Focal abn (ex or scan) Often no • Family hx no YES
Neurontin (1993) • Felbatol (1993) • Lamictal (1994) • Topamax (1996) • Gabitril (1997) • Keppra (1999) • Trileptal (2000) • Zonegran (2000) • Lyrica (2004) • Vimpat (2008) • Sabril (2009) • Phenobarbital (1912) • Dilantin (1938) • Ethosuximide (1955) • Tegretol (1974) • Valproate (1978) Vagus Nerve Stimulator (1997)
47 % 36 % First Drug Tried Not Controlled 4 % 13 % Second Drug Success of AEDs in Previously Untreated Epilepsy Pts. (470) NEJM 2000;342:314-319. Kwan P, Brodie MJ.
Dilantin dose increased from 400 to 500 per day
What you should now know: • SPELLS of… Vision, consciousness, weakness, etc… • Avoid terms such as “Blacking Out”, “Passing Out”, “Fell Out” • Syncope definition, evaluation, prognosis • Epilepsy, Tx & eval of epilepsy, Control of epilepsy • “Normal” AED Level • Therapeutic AED level • Toxic Level • “Post-ictal” • “Petit Mal” (Absence) sz • Convulsive syncope • Tussive Syncope & Micturation Syncope • “Hypoglycemia” spells • “Drop Attacks” due to “V-B Insufficiency” or “Subclavian Steal” • Carotid dz (? Causing syncope/spells with LOC) • Bank Robberies and other complex activity during seizures or somnambulism