Neftaly Pediatric Seizure Management

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Neftaly Pediatric Seizure Management

Overview

Seizures in pediatric patients represent a common neurological emergency requiring prompt recognition and management to prevent complications. Effective pediatric seizure management involves rapid assessment, stabilization, identifying underlying causes, and initiating appropriate treatment.

Types of Pediatric Seizures

  • Febrile Seizures: Usually occur in children 6 months to 5 years with fever; generally benign.
  • Neonatal Seizures: Occur in newborns, often linked to hypoxic injury or metabolic disturbances.
  • Epileptic Seizures: Recurrent seizures due to epilepsy, including focal and generalized types.
  • Status Epilepticus: Prolonged seizure >5 minutes or recurrent without recovery—medical emergency.

Initial Assessment

  1. Airway, Breathing, Circulation (ABCs): Ensure airway patency and adequate breathing; provide oxygen if needed.
  2. Protect the Child: Prevent injury by clearing surroundings; do not restrain movements.
  3. Monitor Vital Signs: Continuous monitoring of pulse, respiratory rate, oxygen saturation, and blood pressure.
  4. Obtain History: Duration, type of movements, previous seizures, triggers, fever, trauma, medication use.

Immediate Management

  • Stop the Seizure:
    • For seizures lasting >5 minutes or recurrent, administer benzodiazepines as first-line agents (e.g., lorazepam, diazepam).
  • Supportive Care:
    • Oxygen supplementation.
    • Establish IV access for medications and fluids.
    • Monitor glucose—treat hypoglycemia promptly.
  • Consider Etiology:
    • Check for fever, infections, trauma, metabolic disturbances, or toxins.
    • Perform bedside glucose, electrolytes, and other labs as needed.

Advanced Management

  • If seizures persist after initial benzodiazepines, use second-line agents such as phenobarbital, phenytoin, or levetiracetam.
  • For refractory status epilepticus, ICU admission may be required with continuous EEG monitoring and anesthesia.

Supportive and Follow-Up Care

  • Address underlying causes: infection treatment, metabolic correction, or neurology referral.
  • Educate caregivers about seizure safety and when to seek emergency care.
  • Arrange follow-up with pediatric neurology for further evaluation and management.

Key Points

  • Seizures lasting over 5 minutes require urgent treatment to prevent brain injury.
  • Maintain airway and prevent hypoxia; benzodiazepines are first-line therapy.
  • Identify and treat underlying causes to reduce recurrence.
  • Early referral to specialists is crucial for ongoing management and prognosis.

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