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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 Neurology. Objectives. Description Lesion localization Work up Management. Definitions. Seizure

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

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  1. So many seizures…so many drugs…What to choose and when Courtenay Freeman, DVM, DACVIM (Neurology) Southeast Veterinary Neurology

  2. Objectives • Description • Lesion localization • Work up • Management

  3. 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

  4. 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)

  5. Classification seizure generalized focal No impairment of consciousness Tonic-clonic Absence Impairment of consciousness Myoclonic Secondarily generalizes Tonic/clonic/atonic

  6. Classification Seizure Intracranial Extracranial • Vascular • Infect/infl • Trauma • Anomaly • Neoplasia • Cryptogenic Structural Toxic Metabolic Functional • Inherited/ • Idiopathic

  7. Differentials • Syncope • Narcolepsy/Cataplexy • Vestibular episodes • Movement disorders

  8. Narcolepsy

  9. Idiopathic head bobbing

  10. Lesion Localization • Forebrain or Prosencephalon • Rostral to tentorium cerebelli • Includes • Cerebrum (telencephalon) • Thalamus (diencephalon)

  11. Forebrain dysfunction • Altered mental status and behavior changes

  12. Gait and Posture • Normal gait • Pleurothotonus • body turn toward lesion • Circling (toward) • Postural reactions • Deficits on contralateral side

  13. Menace response • Absent contralateral to lesion • Normal PLR

  14. 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

  15. Other Seizures!!

  16. Idiopathic epilepsy • Recurrent seizures with no identifiable cause • Genetic predisposition • Cryptogenic epilepsy • No identifiable cause • No genetic predisposition

  17. IE: Signalment • 6 months to 6 years of age • Normal neurologic examination • Normal inter-ictal examination • Purebred dog

  18. Diagnostics • Minimum data base • CBC • Chemistry Profile • Urinalysis • +/- Liver function tests • Advanced imaging??

  19. Who should be imaged? • Asymmetrical neurologic examination • Abnormal inter-ictal period • Patients > 6 years old • All dogs??

  20. Treatment • Goals? • Maintain seizure control • Limit unacceptable side effects • Seizure control ≠ elimination • When to start?

  21. Seizure therapy PRINCIPLES • Life-long daily treatment • Frequent reevaluations are necessary • Potentials for emergency situations • Inherent risks of the drugs

  22. Seizure therapy When to start? • Intracranial disease • Status epilepticus • Cluster seizures • 2 or > isolated events in 4 - 6 wk period

  23. Phenobarbital • “Broad spectrum” • Increases seizure threshold • Decreases spread of seizures • Good first line drug • Controls ~ 80% of IE dogs

  24. 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

  25. How to use PB ? 2-4 mg/kg twice daily 45 15 Dosing interval << T1/2 (accumulation) 5.5 time T1/2 = 10 to 14 days

  26. 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

  27. Loading Dose Total Phenobarbital loading dose: 18 to 24 mg/kg intravenously over 24 hr Loading 10 to 14 days

  28. 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)

  29. Phenobarbital: adverse effects Dose-related / transient (1) Sedation (2) Polydipsia & polyuria (3) Polyphagia (less common in cats) (4) Pelvic limb weakness

  30. 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

  31. Potassium Bromide • No biotransformation • Competes with Cl- • Hyperpolarization • Synergistic effects • Controls 80% of refractory cases • Entirely excreted by kidneys

  32. 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

  33. Potassium Bromide Loading dose : Total dose = 600 mg/kg Divided over 4 days = 150 mg/kg/day Risks = vomiting / extreme sedation

  34. Potassium Bromide • PuPd, Polyphagia, • Pruritus • Hyperactivity/ behavioral change • Pancreatitis (with PB)? • Asthma in cats • Allergic Pneumonitis 35-42% • Idiosyncratic • Resolves over 1-2 months

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

  36. Benzodiazepines • Mechanism of Action • Increase the frequency of the chloride channel opening • Hyperpolarizes cell

  37. Diazepam • Half-life: • Dogs ~ 3hrs • Cat ~ 8-10hrs • Develop tolerance to medication • Rapid withdrawal may induce seizures

  38. 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

  39. 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

  40. 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

  41. Gabapentin (Neurontin) • Metabolized in liver • T1/2 3-4 hrs • 10-20 mg/kg TID PO • 50% improved control • Do not use liquid formulation!

  42. 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?

  43. Levetiracetam • 20 mg/kg tid PO (Keppra XR?) • Use higher dose when with PB • 50% improved control • IV use in emergencies • Ataxia & sedation

  44. Zonisamide • Synthetic sulfonamide • “Broad spectrum”/multi-modal • Half-life 17 hrs (dog), ~35 hrs (cat) • Liver metabolism

  45. 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

  46. 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

  47. 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

  48. Status epilepticus ADMISSION 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

  49. Status epilepticusTreatment #1 • Stop seizure activity 1. 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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