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So many seizures… so many drugs… What to choose and when

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So many seizures… so many drugs… What to choose and when. Courtenay Freeman, DVM, DACVIM (Neurology) Southeast Veterinary Neurology. Objectives. Description Lesion localization Work up Management. Definitions. Seizure - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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So many seizures… so many drugs… What to choose and when Courtenay Freeman, DVM, DACVIM (Neurology) Southeast Veterinary Neurology QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see thi
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Page 1: So many seizures… so many drugs… What to choose and when

So many seizures…so many drugs…

What to choose and when

Courtenay Freeman, DVM, DACVIM (Neurology)

Southeast Veterinary NeurologyQuickTime™ and a decompressor

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Page 2: So many seizures… so many drugs… What to choose and when

Objectives

• Description

• Lesion localization

• Work up

• Management

Page 3: So many seizures… so many drugs… What to choose and when

Definitions

• Seizure– The clinical manifestation of an abnormal

and excessive synchronization of a population of cortical neurons

• Epilepsy– Tendency toward recurrent seizures

• Unprovoked by systemic or acute neurologic insults

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Definitions• Prodrome

– Longterm indication of seizure– hours to days before seizures

• Aura– Initial sensation of seizure before observable

signs– seconds-minutes prior to seizure

• Ictus– Seizure itself, usually 1-3minutes

• Post ictus– Transient abnormalities in brain function– Several hours to 1-2 days, 3-4 days (horses)

Page 5: So many seizures… so many drugs… What to choose and when

Classification

focal generalized

Impairment of consciousness

No impairment of consciousness

seizure

Secondarily generalizes

Absence

Tonic-clonic

Myoclonic

Tonic/clonic/atonic

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Classification

Seizure

Intracranial Extracranial

Structural

Functional

Metabolic Toxic

•Vascular•Infect/infl•Trauma•Anomaly•Neoplasia•Cryptogenic

•Inherited/Idiopathic

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Differentials

• Syncope

• Narcolepsy/Cataplexy

• Vestibular episodes

• Movement disorders

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Narcolepsy

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Idiopathic head bobbing

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Lesion Localization

• Forebrain or Prosencephalon– Rostral to tentorium

cerebelli

• Includes• Cerebrum (telencephalon)• Thalamus (diencephalon)

Page 12: So many seizures… so many drugs… What to choose and when

Forebrain dysfunction

• Altered mental status and behavior changes

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Gait and Posture

• Normal gait– Pleurothotonus • body turn toward lesion

– Circling (toward)

• Postural reactions– Deficits on contralateral side

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Menace response

• Absent contralateral to lesion• Normal PLR

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Sensory

• Facial hypoalgesia• Hypoaesthesia on

contralateral side of body

• Hemineglect– Ignore sensory

input from one half of their body• Eat out of one half

of bowl

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OtherSeizures!!

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Idiopathic epilepsy

• Recurrent seizures with no identifiable cause

• Genetic predisposition• Cryptogenic epilepsy– No identifiable cause– No genetic predisposition

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IE: Signalment

• 6 months to 6 years of age• Normal neurologic examination• Normal inter-ictal examination• Purebred dog

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Diagnostics

• Minimum data base– CBC– Chemistry Profile– Urinalysis–+/- Liver function tests

• Advanced imaging??

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Who should be imaged?

• Asymmetrical neurologic examination• Abnormal inter-ictal period• Patients > 6 years old

• All dogs??

Page 21: So many seizures… so many drugs… What to choose and when

Treatment

• Goals?– Maintain seizure control– Limit unacceptable side

effects– Seizure control ≠ elimination

• When to start?

Page 22: So many seizures… so many drugs… What to choose and when

Seizure therapy

PRINCIPLES

• Life-long daily treatment

• Frequent reevaluations are necessary

• Potentials for emergency situations

• Inherent risks of the drugs

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Seizure therapy

When to start?

• Intracranial disease • Status epilepticus• Cluster seizures• 2 or > isolated

events in 4 - 6 wk period

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Phenobarbital

– “Broad spectrum”

– Increases seizure threshold

– Decreases spread of seizures

– Good first line drug• Controls ~ 80% of IE dogs

Page 25: So many seizures… so many drugs… What to choose and when

Phenobarbital

Dose (a) Dog - 2 - 4 mg/kg every 12 hours

(b) Cat – 1.5 - 2.5 mg/kg every 12 hours

Therapeutic serum concentration (a) Dog - 15 - 40 µg / ml

(b) Cats - 23.2 - 30.2 µg / ml

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How to use PB ?

5.5 time T1/2 = 10 to 14 days

Dosing interval << T1/2 (accumulation)

15

45

2-4 mg/kg twice daily

Page 27: So many seizures… so many drugs… What to choose and when

Phenobarbital

– T1/2; Steady State (SS)• Dog – 32-90 hours; 10-18 days• Cat – 34-43 hours; 10-14 days• Horse – 14-25 hours; 3-6 days

– 90-100% Bioavailable

– Peak conc. 4-8hrs

– Primarily Hepatic metabolism• Up to 25% excreted unchanged by

kidneys

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Loading Dose

Total Phenobarbital loading dose: 18 to 24 mg/kg intravenously over 24 hr

Loading 10 to 14 days

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Phenobarbital: adverse effects

Idiosyncratic

(1) Hyperexcitability

(2) Acute toxic hepatopathy in dogs

(3) Immune-mediated bone marrow suppression

(4) Lymphadenopathy in cats (pseudolymphoma)

(5) Superficial necrotizing dermatitis

(6) Facial pruritus and limb edema (cat)

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Phenobarbital: adverse effects

Dose-related / transient

(1) Sedation (2) Polydipsia & polyuria (3) Polyphagia

(less common in cats) (4) Pelvic limb weakness

Page 31: So many seizures… so many drugs… What to choose and when

Phenobarbital: adverse effects

Laboratory changes

(1) Elevation of serum ALP (2) Depression of serum albumin

(3) Serum T4 and fT4 significantly depressed in 60-70% dogs (minimal fluctuation in TT3)(4) Serum TSH may even be elevated in <7% dogs (slow, compensatory)

(5) Cholesterol high normal

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Potassium Bromide

• No biotransformation• Competes with Cl-

• Hyperpolarization• Synergistic effects• Controls 80% of refractory

cases• Entirely excreted by kidneys

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Potassium Bromide

• 30 mg/kg/day orally • T1/2 (dog): 25 to 46 days (cat 10 days)• Steady state (dog): 3 to 6 months• Serum concentration: 800-1500 µg/mL

Page 34: So many seizures… so many drugs… What to choose and when

Potassium Bromide

Loading dose :Total dose = 600 mg/kgDivided over 4 days = 150 mg/kg/day

Risks = vomiting / extreme sedation

Page 35: So many seizures… so many drugs… What to choose and when

Potassium Bromide

• PuPd, Polyphagia, • Pruritus• Hyperactivity/ behavioral

change• Pancreatitis (with PB)?• Asthma in cats– Allergic Pneumonitis 35-42%– Idiosyncratic– Resolves over 1-2 months

Page 36: So many seizures… so many drugs… What to choose and when

Bromism

• Dose-dependant• Ataxia, Sedation • Pelvic limb stiffness and weakness

Page 37: So many seizures… so many drugs… What to choose and when

Benzodiazepines

• Mechanism of Action– Increase the

frequency of the chloride channel opening

– Hyperpolarizes cell

Page 38: So many seizures… so many drugs… What to choose and when

Diazepam

• Half-life: – Dogs ~ 3hrs – Cat ~ 8-10hrs

• Develop tolerance to medication• Rapid withdrawal may induce

seizures

Page 39: So many seizures… so many drugs… What to choose and when

Diazepam

• Emergency management of seizures

• Limited use in dogs

• 0.5-1 mg/kg divided bid - tid

• Steady state in 3.5 - 4.5 days

• Monitor liver enzymes after 5 days due to risk of hepatic necrosis

Page 40: So many seizures… so many drugs… What to choose and when

Adjunctive MedicationClorazepate

• Metabolized to nordiazepam

• Tolerance develops but slower than to diazepam

• 0.5 mg/kg q8-12 hrs

• Useful for ‘breakthroughs’ as only effective for 2 months

Page 41: So many seizures… so many drugs… What to choose and when

Gabapentin / PREGABALIN

• Structural analogue of GABA

• Binds to the a2-d sub-unit of high voltage pre-synaptic calcium channels– Decreases NT release

• Half-life 3-4 hrs

• 30% metabolized in liver – rest unchanged in urine

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Gabapentin (Neurontin)

• Metabolized in liver

• T1/2 3-4 hrs

• 10-20 mg/kg TID PO

• 50% improved control

• Do not use liquid formulation!

Page 43: So many seizures… so many drugs… What to choose and when

Levetiracetam

• Binds to a synaptic vesicle (SVA2)– Modulates of neurotransmitter release,

reuptake, recycling

• Half-Life 2-4 hrs

• Excreted primarily through kidney

• HONEYMOON EFFECT– Dogs develop recurrence of seizure

frequency – tolerance?

Page 44: So many seizures… so many drugs… What to choose and when

Levetiracetam

• 20 mg/kg tid PO (Keppra XR?)

• Use higher dose when with PB

• 50% improved control

• IV use in emergencies

• Ataxia & sedation

Page 45: So many seizures… so many drugs… What to choose and when

Zonisamide

• Synthetic sulfonamide

• “Broad spectrum”/multi-modal

• Half-life 17 hrs (dog), ~35 hrs (cat)

• Liver metabolism

Page 46: So many seizures… so many drugs… What to choose and when

Zonisamide (Zonegran)

• 50% refractory epileptics respond

• 5-10 mg/kg bid PO

• Need increased dose with PB

• Side Effects– Transient sedation, ataxia– Acute hepatoxicity (idiosyncratic)– KCS

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Felbamate• Mechanism of action– Inhibits NMDA and kainate receptor

activation– Inhibits voltage dependent Na+ channels

• High bioavailability• T ½ of 4-6 hours• 70% excreted in urine unchanged, 30% liver

• Side Effects– blood dyscrasias, hepatotoxicity

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Status epilepticus

• Definition: seizure activity > 5 min• Cluster seizures: 2 or > seizures in a 12

to 24 hour period

• Anticonvulsants: drug to stop seizure activity

• Antiepileptic: drug to prevent seizure activity

Page 49: So many seizures… so many drugs… What to choose and when

Status epilepticusADMISSION MANAGEMENT

• History• Rectal temperature – cool if >104˚F/40˚C• Blood work – Electrolytes/ Ca++ / Glucose / bile acids /

Toxicity screen / PCV / TP• +/- Dextrose 10% solution; 100 mg/kg IV• Oxygen administration• +/- IV catheter

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Status epilepticusTreatment #1

• Stop seizure activity1. Diazepam– 0.5 - 1.0 mg/kg IV, 0.5 - 2.0 mg/kg rectally or IN– Midazolam 0.2 mg/kg IV/IM/nasally

2. Phenobarbital 2-4 mg/kg IV/IM– Onset of action ~20 min– q 30 min intervals if needed (20-24 mg/kg/24 hr)

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Status epilepticusTreatment #2

• Valium/midazolam CRI– 0.5 - 2.0 mg/kg/hour IV CRI in 0.9%

saline– Respiratory depression possible– Reduce dose q3-6 hr to effect

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Status epilepticusTreatment #3

• Levetiracetam (Keppra) IV

• Anticonvulsant and anti-epileptic

• 20 to 60 mg/kg IV over 2 minutes lasts 8 hours (dilute)

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Status epilepticusTreatment #4

• Barbituate coma– Pentobarbital 3 - 24 mg/kg

IV to effect– Profound respiratory and

cardiac depression– Especially if toxin induced

seizures

• Propofol coma– Anticonvulsant properties– Bolus 1-4 mg/kg IV to

effect – CRI (0.1-0.6 mg/kg/min)– Consider expense

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Status epilepticusTreatment #5

Last Ditch!!• Inhalational Anesthesia vs.

thiopental

• Ketamine – 5mg/kg IV then 5 mg/kg/hr

• Potassium bromide rectally – 100 mg/kg q4hrs 6 doses

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Status epilepticusTreatment #6

• Cerebral edema?– Oxygen and Fluids– Methylprednisolone sodium

succinate?– Furosemide 1.0 mg/kg IM, IV– Mannitol 20% 0.5 g/kg IV

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Status epileptusPost seizure management

• Thoracic and Abdominal imaging• Urinalysis / Indwelling urinary catheter• ECG• CT / MRI• CSF• +/-Gastric lavage

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Courtenay Freeman, DVM, DACVIM (Neurology)


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