Definitions, Etiology & Pathophysiology
Medications
Algorithms
Ketogenic Diet
Pediatric Pearls
100

What is the minimum duration for a seizure to be classified as status epilepticus?

Bonus: What was the previous duration definition? 

5 minutes 

100

What is the maximum loading dose of levetiracetam (in mg)? 

4500 mg 

100

What is the first-line agent for status epilepticus? 

Bonus: Name the routes of administration

Benzodiazepines

Bonus: lorazepam is IV, diazepam is PR/IV, midazolam is IM, IN, buccal

100

What IV fluid should be avoided in patients on a ketogenic diet?

Dextrose

100

What is the preferred agent for pediatric refractory SE according to the NYP algorithm? 

Midazolam infusion 

200

What is the definition of super-refractory SE? 

SE that continues or recurs 24 hours or more after the onset of anesthesia, including those cases in which SE recurs on the reduction or withdrawal of analgesia 

200

What is the target total phenytoin level for status epilepticus? 

Bonus: What about non-SE seizures?

15-25 mcg/mL

10-20 mcg/mL

200

What was the conclusion of the ESETT trial? 

Levetiracetam, fosphenytoin and valproate were found to be equally efficacious in improving patient responsiveness for status epilepticus 

200

True or False: Suspensions are preferred over tablets for pediatric patients on a ketogenic diet.

FALSE

200

What is the FDA-approved antiepileptic for neonatal seizures? 

Bonus: What type of formulation is used in neonates?

Phenobarbital

Bonus: preservative-free

300

Provide one potential etiology of seizures in each of the following populations: neonatal, pediatric, adult.

Neonates: HIE, stroke, congenital, metabolic, infectious, drug-induced

Pediatric: genetic, trauma, febrile, metabolic, autoimmune

Adult: trauma, tumor, stroke, encephalitis, meningitis, metabolic, drug/alcohol induced

300

What are the benefits of fosphenytoin over phenytoin?

Faster infusion rate, safer side effect profile (no purple glove syndrome), better compatibility 

300

What are the alternative options for urgent control according to the NYP Adults SE algorithm? 

Lacosamide, brivaracetam, phenobarbital 

300

In a ketogenic diet, what % of calories should come from fat, protein, and carbohydrates each? 

65-75% fat, 20-25% protein, 5-10% carbohydrates

300

What are the risk factors for febrile seizures? 

NICU stays > 28 days, developmental delays, infection, family history of seizures

400

Name two neurotransmitters involved in the pathophysiology of seizures and classify them as inhibitory or excitatory.

Glutamate: excitatory

GABA: inhibitory 

400

Identify the site of action for the following medications: phenytoin, lorazepam, levetiracetam, ketamine

Na channels, GABA receptors, SV2A receptors, NMDA receptors
400

What other medication can ketamine be combined with to lower dose requirements? 

Simultaneous benzodiazepine infusion 

400

Name two of the proposed mechanisms of a ketogenic diet in the management of epilepsy. 

Increased levels of GABA, decreased levels of glutamate, increased production of BDNF, remodeling of gut microbiome, improvement of mitochondrial action, antagonize AMPA receptors, activation of KATP currents

400

Name two treatment options for infantile spasms, and the side effect that requires a REMS program for one of them. 

Adrenocorticotropic hormone, vigabatrin

REMS for vision loss caused by vigabatrin

500

Describe the pathophysiology of status epilepticus.

•After repeated seizures, GABA-a receptors are internalized

•GABA-a receptors become inactive because they are no longer within reach of the neurotransmitter

•In contrast, NMDA subunits are mobilized to the synaptic membrane and assemble into additional receptors

•As a result, the number of functional NMDA receptors per synapse increases, whereas the number of functional GABA-a receptors decreases

500

What are the major side effects of propofol and what monitoring parameters should be used? 

Side effects: PRIS, hypotension, hypertriglyceridemia, pancreatitis

Monitor: TG, pH, HCO3, CPK, lipase, BP

500

Provide a treatment option and dosing for emergent initial therapy, urgent control, refractory SE, and super-refractory SE. 

emergent: lorazepam, diazepam or midazolam

urgent: levetiracetam, valproate, fosphenytoin

refractory: midazolam, propofol

super-refractory: ketamine, pentobarbital

500

Identify two interventions a pharmacist can make during order verification for the following med list for a patient on a ketogenic diet:

- acetaminophen chewable tablet

- senna tablets

- phenytoin suspension

- albuterol nebulizer

- amoxicillin suspension 


acetaminophen to non-chewable tablet, phenytoin suspension to capsules, amoxicillin suspension to capsules

500

A 3-year-old child (15 kg) with history of epilepsy presents to the ED in status epilepticus. The patient already received rectal diazepam at home, followed by IV lorazepam on arrival in ED, with no response. The team orders levetiracetam 150 mg po. What is wrong with this order?

150 mg would be 10 mg/kg which is too low for SE. The correct order would be 60 mg/kg IV -> 900 mg IV