Treatment of status epilepticus: an international survey of experts.
Publication/Presentation Date
4-1-2013
Abstract
BACKGROUND: As part of the development of the Neurocritical Care Society (NCS) Status Epilepticus (SE) Guidelines, the NCS SE Writing Committee conducted an international survey of SE experts.
METHODS: The survey consisted of three patient vignettes (case 1, an adult; case 2, an adolescent; case 3, a child) and questions regarding treatment. The questions for each case focused on initial and sequential therapy as well as when to use continuous intravenous (cIV) therapy and for what duration. Responses were obtained from 60/120 (50%) of those surveyed.
RESULTS: This survey reveals that there is expert consensus for using intravenous lorazepam for the emergent (first-line) therapy of SE in children and adults. For urgent (second-line) therapy, the most common agents chosen were phenytoin/fosphenytoin, valproate sodium, and levetiracetam; these choices varied by the patient age in the case scenarios. Physicians who care for adult patients chose cIV therapy for RSE, especially midazolam and propofol, rather than a standard AED sooner than those who care for children; and in children, there is a reluctance to choose propofol. Pentobarbital was chosen later in the therapy for all ages.
CONCLUSION: There is close agreement between the recently published NCS guideline for SE and this survey of experts in the treatment of SE.
Volume
18
Issue
2
First Page
193
Last Page
200
ISSN
1556-0961
Published In/Presented At
Riviello, J. J., Jr, Claassen, J., LaRoche, S. M., Sperling, M. R., Alldredge, B., Bleck, T. P., Glauser, T., Shutter, L., Treiman, D. M., Vespa, P. M., Bell, R., Brophy, G. M., & Neurocritical Care Society Status Epilepticus Guideline Writing Committee (2013). Treatment of status epilepticus: an international survey of experts. Neurocritical care, 18(2), 193–200. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12028-012-9790-1
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
23097138
Department(s)
Department of Medicine
Document Type
Article