Epilepsy Flashcards

1
Q

What are seizures?

A

Transient episodes of abnormal electrical activity in the brain

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2
Q

What are the different types of seizures?

A
  • Generalised tonic-clonic
  • Focal seizures
  • Myoclonic
  • Tonic
  • Atonic
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3
Q

What do generalised tonic-clonic seizures involve?

A

Tonic (muscle tensing)
Clonic (muscle jerking)
Aura
Post-ictal period

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4
Q

What do focal seizures involve?

A
  • Occur in isolated brain area, usually temporal lobe
  • Affects hearing, speech, memory and emotions
  • Can remain aware or lose awareness during these
  • Strange smells, tastes, sight or sound can be present
  • Deja vu, unusual emotions and abnormal behaviours also present
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5
Q

How do myoclonic seizures present?

A
  • Brief sudden muscle contractions like abrupt jumps/jolts
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6
Q

How do tonic seizures present?

A
  • Sudden increase in muscle tone where the body stiffens
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7
Q

How do atonic seizures present?

A
  • Sudden loss of muscle tone resulting in a fall
  • Usually only very brief and patients are aware during these episodes
  • Often begin in childhood
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8
Q

How do infantile spasms present?

A
  • Clusters of full body-spasms
  • Associated with developmental regression and poor prognosis
  • Hypsarrhythmia on EEG
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9
Q

How do febrile convulsions present?

A
  • Tonic-clonic seizures which occur in children with a high fever
  • Common between 6 months and 5 years
  • Usually no lasting damage
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10
Q

How are seizures investigated?

A
  • EEG
  • MRI brain can be used
  • Bloods to exclude other pathology e.g. glucose, cultures, electrolytes
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11
Q

How should patients with epilepsy be managed?

A
  • Specific driving advice
  • Take showers rather than baths and they need particular caution with swimming, heights and dangerous equipment
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12
Q

What is the pharmacological treatment for epilepsy types?

A

Generalised TC - Valproate for men, Lamotrigine/Leviteracetam for women
Focal - Lamotrigine/Leviteracetam
Myoclonic - Valproate for men, Levetiracetam for women
Tonic/Atonic - Valproate for men, Lamotrigine for women
Absence - Ethosuximide

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13
Q

What is status epilepticus?

A
  • Seizures more than 5 minutes
  • Seizures without regaining consciousness
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14
Q

How should status epilepticus be managed?

A

ABCDE approach
- Secure airway
- Give oxygen
- Check blood glucose levels
- IV access

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15
Q

What is the medical treatment for status epilepticus?

A
  • First line: Buccal midazolam in the community or rectal diazepam
  • If IV access present, IV Lorazepam
  • After 2 doses of benzodiazepines, use IV leviteracetam, phenytoin, valproate
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