RECOGNITION AND ASSESSMENT

Definition

  • Repeated seizures that fluctuate in severity and may last for hours or days
    • most common in patients with temporal or frontal lobe epilepsy, or where epilepsy is associated with a learning disability
    • most patients already have an established diagnosis of epilepsy and are taking treatment

Symptoms and signs

  • Fluctuating conscious level without loss of consciousness
  • Look for:
    • confusion, agitation or aggressive behaviour
    • drowsiness
    • ataxia
  • Previous history of cluster seizures or non-convulsive status

Differential diagnosis

  • Drug toxicity
  • Behavioural problems

Important underlying causes

  • Recent changes in anti-epileptic drug therapy, dose or brand prescribed
  • Underlying infection

Investigations

  • FBC
  • U&E
  • Glucose
  • If taking carbamazepine, phenobarbital or phenytoin, serum anticonvulsant concentrations

IMMEDIATE TREATMENT

  • Contact on-call neurology SpR for advice
    • need for urgent EEG, admission and management
    • avoid alteration in drug treatment before seeking advice
  • Admission, if indicated, should be under care of consultant neurologist, if possible
    • if patient admitted to general medical ward, notify as soon as possible clinical nurse specialist in epilepsy or consultant neurologist already concerned with patient’s care

DISCHARGE AND FOLLOW-UP

  • If patient not admitted, send A&E card to clinical nurse specialist in epilepsy for urgent outpatient review
  • If patient admitted, arrange outpatient review with neurology service

© 2022 The Bedside Clinical Guidelines Partnership.

Created by University Hospital North Midlands and Keele University School of Computing and Mathematics.

Research and development team: James Mitchell, Ed de Quincey, Charles Pantin, Naveed Mustfa