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Table of ContentsSTATUS EPILEPTICUS and TREATMENT of SEIZURESThere are a number of toxins that may lead to refractory seizures. Toxins may trigger seizures indirectly (secondary to hypotension or hypoxia) or directly. It is generally the directly proconvulsant drugs that lead to status epilepticus. MECHANISMS OF SEIZURE PRODUCTIONDirectly proconvulsantThe mechanisms of seizure production from directly proconvulsant drugs include
Unclear mechanismsMany drugs are clearly proconvulsant but the mechanism is poorly understood (e.g. organochlorines, tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs)).TREATMENTIn all cases, seizures indicate life threatening toxicity and all specific treatments should be used (e.g. haemoperfusion or haemodialysis for theophylline, alkalinisation for TCAs) The treatment of seizures should roughly follow the following, non toxin specific, order:
NB. PHENYTOIN 15 mg/kg by slow IV infusion (less than 50 mg/min) is the most common recommended first line anticonvulsant drug treatment for seizures (after diazepam). However there are a number of toxicological contraindications and the cardiac effects (phenytoin is a class 1b antiarrhythmic drug) are probably undesirable in most proconvulsant drug overdoses. REFRACTORY SEIZURESA fitting patient should never be paralysed without EEG monitoring !!!!!!! The neurological damage caused by refractory seizures is due to the extensive release of excitatory neurotransmitters (e.g. glutamate). The muscle movements are the only usual indication that seizure activity is continuing and needs to be controlled. These muscle movements do not in themselves usually lead to significant problems although paralysis (with EEG monitoring) may be warranted to prevent lactic acidosis in some poisonings. Note that the content you create on http://curriculum.toxicology.wikispaces.net is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike Non-Commercial 3.0 License. Please only submit content that you write yourself or that is in the public domain. Learn more about our open content policy. |
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