Pediatrics

🧠 Epilepsy and Seizure Disorders in Children - Part 2

A Comprehensive Article

Common Pediatric Diseases and Disorders

A 7-year-old girl is brought to your clinic by her teacher, who reports she "spaces out" multiple times daily. During these episodes, she stops whatever she's doing, stares blankly for about 10 seconds, then resumes her activity as if nothing happened. She's unaware these episodes occurred. Her EEG shows 3 Hz spike-and-wave discharges. This is childhood absence epilepsy—a common, treatable epilepsy syndrome with excellent prognosis. But how do we confirm the diagnosis? What treatment should we start? And what should we tell her parents about her future?

🩺 Diagnostic Approach: Finding the Cause

🩺 The Diagnostic Workup

A systematic approach to diagnosis is essential for accurate classification and appropriate treatment of seizure disorders.

Essential Diagnostic Tools

  • Detailed History: Most important diagnostic tool
  • EEG (Electroencephalogram): Records brain electrical activity
  • Neuroimaging: MRI preferred over CT for epilepsy
  • Laboratory Studies: Metabolic, toxic, infectious workup
  • Genetic Testing: For specific epilepsy syndromes

EEG: The Cornerstone of Epilepsy Diagnosis

  • Routine EEG: 20-30 minutes, awake and asleep
  • Sleep-deprived EEG: Increases yield
  • Ambulatory EEG: 24-72 hours at home
  • Video-EEG Monitoring: Gold standard, inpatient
  • Activation Procedures: Hyperventilation, photic stimulation
EEG interpretation: Look for interictal epileptiform discharges (spikes, sharp waves), ictal patterns (rhythmic activity evolving in frequency/amplitude), and background abnormalities.
Detailed History — From patient and witnesses, description of events
Physical Examination — Neurological exam, dysmorphic features, neurocutaneous stigmata
EEG — Essential for diagnosis and classification
Neuroimaging — MRI to identify structural causes
High-yield fact: A normal EEG does not rule out epilepsy! Up to 50% of people with epilepsy have a normal first EEG. Repeat or prolonged EEG monitoring increases diagnostic yield.

💊 Treatment Principles: When and How to Treat

💊 Individualized Treatment Approach

Treatment decisions should be individualized based on seizure type, epilepsy syndrome, patient age, comorbidities, and patient/family preferences.

When to Start Treatment

  • Definite epilepsy: ≥2 unprovoked seizures >24 hours apart
  • Single unprovoked seizure: Consider if high recurrence risk
  • High recurrence risk factors: Abnormal EEG, prior brain injury, nocturnal seizure, Todd's paralysis
  • Febrile seizures: No daily AEDs needed

Treatment Goals

  • Seizure freedom: No seizures with minimal side effects
  • Improved quality of life: Not just seizure control
  • Normal development: Especially important in children
  • Individualized targets: Complete control may not be possible in refractory epilepsy

📋 Treatment Decision Factors

  • Seizure type and epilepsy syndrome
  • Likelihood of recurrence
  • Risk of injury from seizures
  • Impact on quality of life
  • Medication side effect profile
  • Patient/family preferences
Treatment delay: Delaying treatment in children with frequent seizures may impact development and learning. Early, effective treatment is particularly important in the developing brain.

🧪 Antiepileptic Medications: Choosing the Right Drug

🧪 Mechanism-Based Treatment

Antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) work through various mechanisms to reduce neuronal excitability and prevent seizure spread.

First-Line AEDs by Seizure Type

  • Focal seizures: Carbamazepine, Oxcarbazepine, Levetiracetam
  • Generalized tonic-clonic: Valproate, Lamotrigine, Levetiracetam
  • Absence seizures: Ethosuximide (drug of choice), Valproate, Lamotrigine
  • Myoclonic seizures: Valproate, Levetiracetam, Topiramate
  • Infantile spasms: ACTH, Vigabatrin, Prednisolone

Important Pediatric Considerations

  • Dosing: Weight-based, often higher mg/kg than adults
  • Formulations: Liquid, sprinkle capsules for young children
  • Side effects: Monitor for behavioral changes, cognitive effects
  • Drug interactions: Many AEDs affect metabolism of other drugs
  • Monitoring: Drug levels, CBC, LFTs for certain AEDs

📋 High-Yield Medication Facts

  • Ethosuximide: Drug of choice for absence seizures only
  • Valproate: Broad spectrum but teratogenic, avoid in girls
  • Carbamazepine/Oxcarbazepine: Can worsen absence and myoclonic seizures
  • Lamotrigine: Slow titration due to Stevens-Johnson risk
  • Levetiracetam: Broad spectrum, few interactions, behavioral SE
  • Vigabatrin: For infantile spasms, causes visual field defects
Select Appropriate AED — Based on seizure type, syndrome, patient factors
Start Low, Go Slow — Begin with low dose, titrate gradually
Monitor Efficacy and Side Effects — Seizure diary, side effect assessment
Optimize Dose — Titrate to seizure control or side effects

🚨 Status Epilepticus: A Neurological Emergency

🚨 Life-Threatening Emergency

Status epilepticus is a medical emergency defined as continuous seizure activity lasting >5 minutes or recurrent seizures without return to baseline.

Management Protocol

  • 0-5 minutes (Stabilization): ABCs, vital signs, oxygen, IV access
  • 5-20 minutes (Initial Therapy): Benzodiazepines (Lorazepam IV/IM, Midazolam IM/buccal)
  • 20-40 minutes (Second Therapy): Load with AED (Fosphenytoin, Valproate, Levetiracetam)
  • 40-60 minutes (Refractory): ICU, continuous infusions (midazolam, pentobarbital)

Causes and Complications

  • Common causes: AED withdrawal, infection, metabolic, structural
  • Acute complications: Hypoxia, hypotension, hyperthermia, acidosis
  • Long-term consequences: Neuronal injury, cognitive impairment
  • Mortality: 10-20% in convulsive status epilepticus

🚨 Time-Sensitive Management

  • Every minute counts: Neuronal damage begins after 30 minutes
  • Benzodiazepines first: Most effective in first 10 minutes
  • Have rescue medications: Buccal/intranasal midazolam for home use
  • Refractory status: Requires ICU admission and continuous EEG monitoring
Time is brain: The longer status epilepticus continues, the harder it is to stop and the greater the risk of permanent neurological injury. Early, aggressive treatment is essential.
Stabilize — ABCs, oxygen, vital signs, IV access, check glucose
Benzodiazepines — First-line treatment within 5-10 minutes
Load AED — Second-line therapy if seizures continue
ICU Management — For refractory status epilepticus
Identify and Treat Cause — Underlying etiology must be addressed

🥗 Non-Pharmacological Treatments: Beyond Medications

🥗 Comprehensive Management Approaches

For patients with drug-resistant epilepsy or specific epilepsy syndromes, non-pharmacological treatments may be effective.

Dietary Therapies

  • Ketogenic Diet: High fat, low carb, medically supervised
  • Modified Atkins Diet: Less restrictive, still effective
  • Mechanism: Ketones have anticonvulsant effects
  • Indications: Drug-resistant epilepsy, specific syndromes
  • Efficacy: >50% seizure reduction in 50-60% of patients

Surgical Options

  • Resective Surgery: Remove epileptogenic focus
  • Corpus Callosotomy: For drop attacks in LGS
  • Hemispherectomy: For Rasmussen's encephalitis, hemimegalencephaly
  • Vagus Nerve Stimulation (VNS): Device implantation
  • Responsive Neurostimulation (RNS): Newer technology

📋 Surgical Candidacy Evaluation

  • Drug-resistant epilepsy (failed ≥2 appropriate AEDs)
  • Identifiable epileptogenic focus
  • Low risk of functional deficit from resection
  • Concordant data from multiple modalities
  • Realistic expectations from patient/family
Identify Drug-Resistant Epilepsy — Failed adequate trials of ≥2 AEDs
Comprehensive Evaluation — Video-EEG monitoring, high-resolution MRI, neuropsychological testing
Multidisciplinary Discussion — Epileptologists, neurosurgeons, neuropsychologists
Surgical Intervention — If appropriate candidate and potential benefit > risk

🔑 High-Yield Epilepsy Summary - Part 2

Aspect Key Points Clinical Applications
Diagnosis History most important, EEG essential but may be normal Repeat EEG if high suspicion, consider prolonged monitoring
Treatment Indications ≥2 unprovoked seizures, consider after first if high risk Individualize based on recurrence risk, seizure type
Medication Selection Based on seizure type, syndrome, patient factors Avoid drugs that can worsen certain seizure types
Status Epilepticus Neurological emergency, time-sensitive treatment Benzodiazepines first, then load AED, then ICU for refractory
Non-Pharmacological Options Dietary therapy, surgery, neuromodulation For drug-resistant epilepsy or specific syndromes

🎯 Key Takeaways - Part 2

  • "Time the seizure!" Duration >5 minutes = status epilepticus = emergency.
  • Benzodiazepines are first-line for acute seizure termination.
  • Choose AED based on seizure type/epilepsy syndrome—some AEDs can worsen certain seizure types.
  • Ethosuximide is drug of choice for absence seizures only.
  • Infantile spasms are a neurological emergency—earlier treatment = better developmental outcome.
  • Consider non-pharmacological options (ketogenic diet, surgery) for drug-resistant epilepsy.
  • Normal EEG doesn't rule out epilepsy—repeat or prolonged monitoring may be needed.
  • Treatment goals include not just seizure control but optimal quality of life and development.

🌟 Comprehensive Epilepsy Care

Managing epilepsy in children requires a comprehensive approach that extends beyond simply prescribing medications. It involves accurate diagnosis and classification, appropriate treatment selection, management of emergencies, consideration of non-pharmacological options when needed, and attention to the child's overall development and quality of life.

Successful epilepsy management is a partnership between the healthcare team, the child, and the family. It requires education about the condition, safety precautions, medication adherence, and recognition of when to seek emergency care. With proper management, most children with epilepsy can achieve good seizure control and lead full, productive lives.

Clinical Pearl: "The goal of epilepsy treatment is not just a seizure-free child, but a happy, thriving child who can reach their full potential." Balancing seizure control with medication side effects and quality of life is the art of epilepsy management.