REFRACTORY STATUS EPILEPTICUS IN ADULTS

被引:66
作者
JAGODA, A
RIGGIO, S
机构
[1] Division of Emergency Medicine, University of Florida, Jacksonville, FL
[2] Department of Neurology, Mayo Clinic Jacksonville, Jacksonville, FL
关键词
status epilepticus;
D O I
10.1016/S0196-0644(05)80120-9
中图分类号
R4 [临床医学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100602 ;
摘要
The management of status epilepticus has improved over the past 20 years, resulting in a substantial decrease in the associated morbidity and mortality Patients who have seizures that are refractory to initial pharmacologic interventions tend to have significant underlying toxic, metabolic, structural, or infectious disorders, and therefore management of refractory status epilepticus must focus on stabilization and on identification and correction of seizure etiology. Regardless of etiology, the faster the seizures are brought under control, the better the prognosis. Risk of central nervous system injury increases after 30 minutes of seizure activity, and therefore efforts should focus on controlling the abnormal electrical discharges at the earliest time possible, preferably within one hour. Benzodiazepines, phenytoin, and phenobarbital remain the most commonly used first- and second-line anticonvulsants, have proven effective in cases of status epilepticus, and should be administered within the first 45 minutes of management. For refractory status epilepticus, pentobarbital anesthesia is evolving as an effective and recommended treatment modality and should be instituted immediately after phenytoin and phenobarbital loading. The role of other anticonvulsants remains to be investigated in controlled clinical trials. © 1993 American College of Emergency Physicians.
引用
收藏
页码:1337 / 1348
页数:12
相关论文
共 130 条
[1]  
Rowan, Scott, Major status epilepticus, Acta Neurol Scand, 46, pp. 573-584, (1970)
[2]  
Treiman, General principles of treatment: Responsive and intractable status epilepticus in adults, Advances in Neurology: Status Epilepticus, 34, pp. 377-384, (1983)
[3]  
Meldrum, Brierley, Prolonged epileptic seizures in primates: Ischemic cell change and its relation to ictal physiological events, Ann Neurol, 28, pp. 10-17, (1973)
[4]  
Aminoff, Simon, Status epilepticus: Causes, clinical features and consequences in 98 patients, Am J Med, 69, pp. 657-666, (1980)
[5]  
Meldrum, Vigouroux, Brierley, Systemic factors and epileptic brain damage, Arch Neurol, 29, pp. 82-87, (1973)
[6]  
Delgado-Escueta, Wasterlain, Treiman, Et al., Management of status epilepticus, N Engl J Med, 306, pp. 1337-1340, (1982)
[7]  
Leppik, Status epilepticus: The next decade, Neurology, 40, pp. 4-9, (1990)
[8]  
Lederman, Status epilepticus, Cleve Clin Q, 51, pp. 261-266, (1984)
[9]  
Bleck, Therapy for status epilepticus, Clin Neuropharmacol, 6, pp. 255-269, (1983)
[10]  
Leppik, Status epilepticus, Neurol Clin, 4, pp. 633-643, (1986)