Seizure Disorders Flashcards

1
Q

What is a seizure?
* Seizure –

A

a discrete clinical event that results in the
abnormal discharge of a set of neurons in the brain
– “A transient occurrence of signs and/or symptoms due to
abnormal excessive or synchronous neuronal activity in the
brain.”
* A single seizure does NOT mean someone has epilepsy!

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2
Q

What is epilepsy?
* Epilepsy – (2)
* Convulsive Status Epilepticus – (4)

A

at least 2 unprovoked seizures
– Network disease and not a localized brain abnormality

failure of the mechanisms
responsible for seizure termination or from the initiation of
mechanisms which lead to abnormally prolonged seizures.
– length of seizure beyond 5 minutes
– second seizure without recovery from the first
– repeated seizures lasting 30 minutes or longer

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3
Q

Epilepsy
* Impacts and estimated — million Americans (1%)
– 150,000 to 200,000 new cases diagnosed each year
– —
times greater mortality (sudden unexplained death)
* Most often presents in infancy and childhood
– —% children have epilepsy
– —% of US population experience seizure in lifetime
* Bimodal distribution of occurrence
– Newborn/young children and > – years of age
* Risk increased with traumatic brain injuries
* > — billion is estimated in indirect and direct costs

A

2 to 3
2 to 3
0.5 % - 1
10
65
$12.5

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4
Q

International League Against
Epilepsy (ILAE) Epilepsy Etiologies
* Genetic –
(3)

A

usually present at a young age
– Dravet Syndrome – mutations in sodium channel, type I alpha
subunit
– Childhood Absence Epilepsy – mutations in T-Type Ca2+
channels and GABA receptor subunits

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5
Q
  • Structural –
A

abnormalities found with neuronal imaging, e.g.
cortical dysplasia, posttraumatic epilepsy

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6
Q
  • Infectious –
A

neurocysticercosis (parasite), meningitis, encephalitis

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7
Q
  • Metabolic –
A

abnormal glycogen metabolism (Lafora Disease)

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8
Q
  • Immune -
  • Unknown
A

anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis (autoimmune)

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9
Q

Seizure Pathophysiology
* Excessive excitation of cortical neurons (hyperexcitable / hypersynchronization)
– Neuronal hyperexcitability -

A

Enhanced predisposition of neuronal
depolarization and discharge when stimulated

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10
Q

– Alterations in the properties of ion channels in the neuronal membrane
(4)

A
  • K+, Na+, Ca2+, Cl-
  • Carbamazepine and Phenytoin reduce neuronal excitability by binding sodium channels in the
    inactive state and slow channel recovery from inactivation, preventing hyperexcitable neurons
    from rapidly and repetitively firing
  • Benzodiazepines bind gamma subunit of GABA-A and increase chloride ion conductance
  • Genetic mutations have been identified in these ion channels
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11
Q

– Defects in ion transport (ATPases) across neuronal membranes
(2)

A
  • Sodium / Potassium / Calcium / Chloride
  • Abnormality in potassium conductance
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12
Q

– Abnormal synaptic vesicle protein 2-A
(1)

A
  • Normally responsible for fusion of vesicles to membrane, but get upregulated in some
    epilepsies (levetiracetam and brivaracetam target)
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13
Q

Seizure Pathophysiology
* Additional Considerations
(5)

A

– Biochemical modification of receptors
– Modulation of second messaging systems and gene expression
– Changes in extracellular ion concentrations
– Alterations in neurotransmitter uptake and metabolism in glial cells
* GABA-T inhibition to increase GABA
– Modifications in the ratio and function of inhibitory circuits

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14
Q
  • Transitory imbalance in neurotransmitters
    (2)
A

– Enhanced excitatory neurotransmission
* Glutamate / Aspartate
Ionotropic glutamate receptors:
NMDA / AMPA / Kainate

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15
Q

Additional Seizure
Etiological Considerations

A
  • Cerebrovascular
    abnormality
  • Tumors
  • Head trauma
  • Infection
  • Hypoxia
  • Fever
  • Medications and Seizure
    medications
    – clozapine
    – bupropion
    – carbamazepine
  • Drug Intoxication
    – Cocaine, ephedrine
  • Metabolic disturbance
    – High OR low glucose
  • Electrolyte disturbance
    – Calcium, sodium, magnesium
  • Alcohol withdrawal
  • Sleep deprivation
  • Hormonal changes
  • Stress
  • Prenatal or birth injury
  • Congenital malformation
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16
Q

Seizure Recurrence Risk Factors

A
  • Abnormal EEG
  • Seizure occurs during sleep
  • Positive family history (sibling)
  • Prior acute seizure
  • Down’s Syndrome and cerebral palsy
    – No clear association of seizure type
    – No association with seizure length
    – No association with age of onset
17
Q

Generalized Seizures
(2)

A
  • Originate at some point
    within and rapidly
    engage bilaterally
    distributed networks
  • Can include cortical and
    subcortical structures
    but not necessarily the
    entire cortex
18
Q

Focal Seizures
(2)

A
  • Originate within
    networks limited
    to one
    hemisphere
  • May be
    discretely
    localized
    or more widely
    distributed….
    Focal Seizures
19
Q

Note:
When a seizure type begins with

A

”focal, generalized or absence” then
the word “onset” can be presumed

20
Q

Childhood Epilepsy
(6)

A
  • Many children who experience a seizure, become
    seizure free
  • Most seizures are brief
  • Rarely do seizures cause long-term brain damage
    without neurologic insult
    – Hypoxia in first 24-48 hours increases risk
  • Medications may cause long-term side effects
  • Children with idiopathic first seizure and normal EEG
    have favorable prognosis
  • Rule-out: fever, infection, trauma
21
Q

What do EEG’s Tell Us?
(3)

A
  • Graphical representation of cortical electrical
    activity
  • Provides high temporal resolution, poor
    spatial resolution of cortical disorder
  • Most important neuropsychological
    assessment tool for diagnosis, and subsequent
    treatment
22
Q

Importance of Detailed History

A
  • Identifiable source (infection /trauma/medication)
    – *Phenothiazines, TCA’s, clozapine, bupropion
    – *Unmasking: CBZ, Phenytoin, Phenobarbital (absence)
  • Precipitating event (stress)
    – Labs: hypoglycemia, hyponatremia, infection
  • Age of onset / frequency
  • EEG patterns
  • Severity
    – Describe the type of movements, sounds, visual
    observations
  • Family history – genetic considerations
  • Observe and note the before, during, and after
    suspected seizure activity (post-ictal)
23
Q

When is Seizure Treatment
Appropriate??
* After — or more seizures.
* Treat after first seizure if:
(4)

A

two

– Idiopathic and abnormal EEG
– Symptomatic and abnormal EEG
– Prior neurologic abnormality
– Positive family history

24
Q

Treatment Goals
(4)

A

1) Prevent occurrence of seizures (no seizure)
– Decrease frequency and severity
2) Prevent or reduce drug side effects and drug interactions
3) Prevent the development of neurologic changes
– Longer seizures = more ischemia
– Increased glutamate exposure = neuronal damage
– Repeated GTC or Status Epilepticus = cognitive decline
4) Improve the patient’s quality of life
– Provide cost-effective care (limit polypharmacy)
– Ensure patient satisfaction
– Prevent toxicity
– Ability to participate and complete ADL’s

25
Q

Reasons Treatments Don’t Work
(5)

A

1) Inappropriate treatment
 Select the wrong drug
2) Inappropriate dose
3) Poor compliance / lack of education
 Drug storage issues (CBZ)
 Drug administration issues (phenytoin
suspension)
4) Drug interactions
 Cytochrome P450
 P-glycoprotein
5) Seizure refractoriness

26
Q

When can you consider stopping
medication treatments?
(5)

A
  • Seizure free 2 to 4 years depending on seizure type
    – 2 years for absence
    – 4 years for partial, tonic-clonic
  • Normal neurological exam / normal IQ
  • Normal EEG with treatment
  • Epilepsy of single seizure type
    – History of control within one year
  • No juvenile or myoclonic epilepsy
27
Q

Seizure Disorder Medications
(Trade and Generic Names)

A
  • Dilantin (phenytoin)
  • Luminal (phenobarbital)
  • Tegretol (carbamazepine)
  • Depakote (divalproex)
  • Keppra (levetiracetam)
  • Zonegran (zonisamide)
  • Gabitril (tiagabine)
  • Banzel (rufinamide)
  • Briviact (brivaracetam)
  • Onfi (clobazam)
  • Cenobamate (Xcopri)
  • Fenfluramine (Fintepla)
  • Topamax (topiramate)
  • Trileptal (oxcarbazepine)
  • Felbatol (felbamate)
  • Lamictal (lamotrigine)
  • Neurontin (gabapentin)
  • Lyrica (pregabalin)
  • Zarontin (ethosuximide)
  • Vimpat (lacosamide)
  • Fyocompa (perampanel)
  • Aptiom (eslicarbazepine)
  • Epidiolex (cannabidiol)
28
Q
A