Best Chance of Seizure Response AEDs
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Transcript of Best Chance of Seizure Response AEDs
Treatment of Seizures Without IV Access
Robert R. Clancy, MD
The Pediatric Regional Epilepsy Programof the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia
and the University of PennsylvaniaSchool of Medicine
Robert Clancy, MD
Best Chance of Seizure Response AEDs
• Early and effective AED treatment
• Speed and reliability of IV route for AED administration is generally preferred, but– Advanced care sometimes unavailable or remote
or, – Available but unable to establish IV access
• Optional routes without IV access: interosseous, PR, IM, nasal, buccal and SL
Robert Clancy, MD
Which of the Following Choices Are Suitable for IM AED Administration for Acute Seizure Control?
a) Phenobarbital, lorazepam and phenytoin
b) Fosphenytoin, phenobarbital and diazepam
c) Phenobarbital, midazolam and fosphenytoin
d) Valproate, lorazepam and fosphenytoin
Robert Clancy, MD
Robert Clancy, MD
What is the recommended dose of rectal diazepam for a 2-year old child?
A. 0.04 mg/kg/dose
B. 0.10 mg/kg/dose
C. 0.50 mg/kg/dose
D. 2.50 mg/kg/dose
Robert Clancy, MD
Robert Clancy, MD
Which of the following statements about the risk of respiratory depression after acute AED administration is FALSE?
A. The risk is higher when benzodiazepine is co-administered with phenobarbital.
B. The risk with lorazepam is higher than diazepam.
C. The risk is increased when the seizures are caused by an acute, severe brain injury.
D. The risk is generally proportional to the speed of AED bolus administration.
Robert Clancy, MD
Robert Clancy, MD
A 14-year old high school student has post-traumatic epilepsy and occasional prolonged seizures in the classroom. The school
nurse asks for management guidelines. You recommend:
A. Home schooling
B. Rectal diazepam, as needed
C. Buccal midazolam, as needed
D. Rectal diazepam for the school nurse, as needed
Robert Clancy, MD
Robert Clancy, MD
Routes for Urgent AED Administration Without IV Access
• Aborts seizure clusters• Avoids progression to status epilepticus• May reduce visits to ED &
hospitalizations• Lower urgency (PR, IM, nasal, buccal,
SL)• Higher urgency – interosseous– Available AEDs: diazepam, lorazepam,
phenytoin, fosphenytoin and phenobarbital
Robert Clancy, MD
Rectal Administration of AEDs
• Absorption occurs by passive diffusion through lipoidal membranes
• Optimal drug is lipid-soluble and non-ionized
• Absorption of solutions > suppositories
• AEDs absorbed by middle and inferior rectal veins which bypass portal circulation and avoids first-pass hepatic elimination
Robert Clancy, MD
Rectal Administration of AEDs
• Drawbacks:– Loss of administered AED into stool– Expulsion from cathartic effect– Social implications from administration by
non-family member– Embarrassment– Commercial kit expensive
Robert Clancy, MD
Nasal Administration
• Drugs may be rapidly absorbed via solution instilled in nasal mucosa
• Existing practice and literature supports use in anesthesia and acute seizures
• Drawback: increase mucous production and nasal discharge during seizures; pre-existing nasal “congestion” from URI etc.
Robert Clancy, MD
Buccal and Sublingual Administration
• Buccal absorption of small volumes of AEDs:–“Just a pinch between cheeks and gums”–Concerns for provoking gagging,
coughing, aspiration or oral loss of drug
• Sublingual may be used between serial seizures; not useful when teeth clenched
Robert Clancy, MD
Robert Clancy, MD
Diazepam• Available routes are IV and rectal• PO and IM administration inadequate if
prompt response needed• Rectal administration:–Peak serum concentration in ~ 6 min–96% effective if given in first 15 min of sz–May need repeat doses (short-acting) or
second AED–May be repeated in 10 min
Robert Clancy, MD
Robert Clancy, MD
Robert Clancy, MD
Rectal Doses of Diazepam for Children
• 2-5 years: 0.5 mg/kg/dose
• 6-11 years: 0.3 mg/kg/dose
• 12+ years: 0.2 mg/kg/dose
• Formulations: IV diazepam 2 ml vials with 5 mg/ml (don’t forget to remove the needle)
• Prepackaged commercial kits with 2.5 mg, 5.0 mg, 10 mg, 15 mg or 20 mg
Robert Clancy, MD
Robert Clancy, MD
Lorazepam• May have some advantages over
diazepam if given IV– Lower risk of respiratory depression– Longer duration of desired AED effects–Marginally better seizure response
• Rectal dose: 0.2 mg/kg/dose– Intravenous form ideally refrigerated
• Sublingual administration also reported
Robert Clancy, MD
Robert Clancy, MD
Midazolam
• May be given IV, IM, rectal, buccal or nasal
• Ideal for IM injection:– Pediatric dose: 0.1-0.3 mg/kg; may repeat in 15 min– Adult dose 5-10 mg– 80-100% IM dose absorbed– Peak effect in 25 min
• Similar speed and effect as IV diazepam to abort EEG seizures
Robert Clancy, MD
Robert Clancy, MD
Midazolam
• Available in 2 ml IV ampules (5 mg/ml)
• Dose for buccal administration = 10 mg (studies in children > 5 years)
• Nasal administration = 0.2 mg/kg/dose
Robert Clancy, MD
Fosphenytoin
• Prodrug of phenytoin
• IV fosphenytoin achieves a free phenytoin level of –2 μg/ml in 15 min compared to 25 min with phenytoin (after ~20 mg/kg load)
• Well absorbed by IM route; therapeutic in ~3 min)
• No requirement for cardiac monitoring
Robert Clancy, MD
Other AEDs That Can Be Administered Rectally
But Slowly Achieve Therapeutic Blood Levels
• Valproate syrup @ ~20 mg/kg (diluted 1:1 by volume with tap water); >90% bioavailable
• Lamotrigine (~63% bioavailable)
• Phenobarbital elixir
Robert Clancy, MD
Which of the Following Choices Are Suitable for IM AED Administration for Acute Seizure Control?
1) Phenobarbital, lorazepam and phenytoin
2) Fosphenytoin, phenobarbital and diazepam
3) Phenobarbital, midazolam and fosphenytoin (Best)
4) Valproate, lorazepam, fosphenytoin
Robert Clancy, MD
What is the Recommended Dose of Rectal Diazepam for a 2-Year Old Child?
a) 0.04 mg/kg/dose
b) 0.10 mg/kg/dose
c) 0.50 mg/kg/dose (Best)
d) 2.50 mg/kg/dose
Robert Clancy, MD
Which of the Following Statements About the Risk of Respiratory Depression After Acute AED Administration
is FALSE?
a) The risk is higher when a benzo is coadministered with phenobarbital.
b) The risk with lorazepam is higher than diazepam. (False)
c) The risk is increased when the seizures are caused by an acute, severe brain injury.
d) The risk is generally proportional to the speed of AED bolus administration.
Robert Clancy, MD
A 14-year old high school student has post-traumatic epilepsy and occasional prolonged seizures in the classroom. The school
nurse asks for management guidelines. You recommend:
A. Home schooling
B. Rectal diazepam, as needed
C. Buccal midazolam, as needed (Best)
D. Rectal diazepam for the school nurse, as needed
(Don’t even go there)