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العنوان
Seizures in Adult ICU Patients /
المؤلف
Mohamed, Ahmed Ra’fat Badawei.
هيئة الاعداد
باحث / أحمد رأفت بدوي محمد
مشرف / أيمن أحمد راضي
مشرف / أمل اسماعيل الإمام
الموضوع
Critical Care Medicine. Intensive Care Unit- Patients.
تاريخ النشر
2019.
عدد الصفحات
105 p. :
اللغة
الإنجليزية
الدرجة
ماجستير
التخصص
الطب الباطني
الناشر
تاريخ الإجازة
27/7/2019
مكان الإجازة
جامعة المنوفية - كلية الطب - طب الحالات الحرجة
الفهرس
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Abstract

Seizures are a relatively common occurrence in the ICU, complicating the course of about 3% of adult intensive care unit patients admitted for nonneurologic conditions. Status epilepticus (SE) may be the primary indication for admission, or it may occur in any ICU patient during a critical illness. A seizure may be the first indication of a central nervous system (CNS) complication or the result of overwhelming systemic disease. Seizures in the setting of critical illness are often difficult to recognize and require a complex diagnostic and management strategy. Delay in recognition and treatment of seizures is associated with increased mortality; thus the rapid diagnosis of this disorder is mandatory.
Status epilepticus refers to a protracted seizure episode or multiple frequent seizures lasting 30 minutes or longer. Although conventional definitions of SE have used this time window, clinicians should recognize that most seizures will terminate spontaneously within a few minutes. Recent data suggest that only half of seizure episodes lasting 10 to 29 minutes will stop spontaneously. Therefore seizures that persist longer than 5 to 7 minutes should be treated to prevent progression to SE.
Limited data are available on the epidemiology of seizures in the ICU. A 10-year retrospective study of all ICU patients with seizures at the Mayo Clinic revealed that 7 patients had seizures per 1000 ICU admissions. The incidence of generalized convulsive SE (GCSE) in the United States is estimated to be up to 195,000 episodes per year, but it is unknown how many of these patients require care in an ICU. The incidence of SE in the elderly is almost twice that of the general population. Eight percent of hospitalized comatose patients in a recent series were found to be in electrographic status epilepticus. Seizures are probably even more frequent in the pediatric ICU, as children in the first year of life have the highest incidence of SE of any age group studied
SE is associated with risks of decline in quality of life and cognition with 30-day mortality ranging from 9.4% to 27%.Prolonged seizures are associated with higher mortality and worse clinical outcomes. Therefore, effective treatment should be initiated as soon as possible.
Optimal management of antiepileptic drugs in the intensive care unit is challenging given altered physiology, polypharmacy, and nonpharmacological interventions, and requires a multidisciplinary approach where appropriate and timely assessment, diagnosis, treatment, and monitoring plans are in place.