Definitions for the strength of evidence (Class 1-3) and strength of recommendations (Level A-C) are repeated at the end of the "Major Recommendations" field.
- What laboratory tests are indicated in the otherwise healthy adult patient with a new-onset seizure who has returned to a baseline normal neurologic status?
Level A recommendations. None specified.
Level B recommendations.
- Determine a serum glucose and sodium level on patients with a first-time seizure with no comorbidities who have returned to their baseline.
- Obtain a pregnancy test if a woman is of child-bearing age.
- Perform a lumbar puncture, after a head computed tomography (CT) scan, either in the emergency department (ED) or after admission, on patients who are immunocompromised.
Level C recommendations. None specified.
- Which new-onset seizure patients who have returned to a normal baseline require a head CT scan in the ED?
Level A recommendations. None specified.
Level B recommendations.
- When feasible, perform a neuroimaging of the brain in the ED on patients with a first-time seizure.
- Deferred outpatient neuroimaging may be used when reliable follow-up is available.
Level C recommendations. None specified.
- Which new-onset seizure patients who have returned to normal baseline need to be admitted to the hospital and/or started on an antiepileptic drug?
Level A recommendations. None specified.
Level B recommendations. None specified.
Level C recommendations:
- Patients with a normal neurologic examination can be discharged from the ED with outpatient follow-up.
- Patients with a normal neurologic examination, no comorbidities, and no known structural brain disease do not need to be started on an antiepileptic drug in the ED.
- What are effective phenytoin or fosphenytoin dosing strategies for preventing seizure recurrence in patients who present to the ED after having had a seizure with a subtherapeutic serum phenytoin level?
Level A recommendations. None specified.
Level B recommendations. None specified.
Level C recommendations. Administer an intravenous or oral loading dose of phenytoin or intravenous or intramuscular fosphenytoin, and restart daily oral maintenance dosing.
- What agent(s) should be administered to a patient in status epilepticus who continues to seize after having received a benzodiazepine and a phenytoin?
Level A recommendations. None specified.
Level B recommendations. None specified.
Level C recommendations. Administer one of the following agents intravenously: "high-dose phenytoin," phenobarbital, valproic acid, midazolam infusion, pentobarbital infusion, or propofol infusion.
- When should electroencephalograph (EEG) testing be performed in the ED?
Level A recommendations. None specified.
Level B recommendations. None specified.
Level C recommendations. Consider an emergent electroencephalograph (EEG) in patients suspected of being in nonconvulsive status epilepticus or in subtle convulsive status epilepticus, patients who have received a long-acting paralytic, or patients who are in a drug-induced coma.
Definitions:
Literature Classification Schema^
Class 1
- Therapy*: Randomized, controlled trial or meta-analyses of randomized trials
- Diagnosis**: Prospective cohort using a criterion standard
- Prognosis***: Population prospective cohort
Class 2
- Therapy*: Nonrandomized trial
- Diagnosis**: Retrospective observational
- Prognosis***: Retrospective cohort; case control
Class 3
- Therapy*: Case series; case report; other (e.g., consensus, review)
- Diagnosis**: Case series; case report; other (e.g., consensus, review)
- Prognosis***: Case series, case report; other (e.g., consensus, review)
^ Some designs (e.g., surveys) will not fit this schema and should be assessed individually.
*Objective is to measure therapeutic efficacy comparing >2 interventions
**Objective is to determine the sensitivity and specificity of diagnostic tests
*** Objective is to predict outcome including mortality and morbidity
Strength of Recommendations
Level A recommendations. Generally accepted principles for patient management that reflect a high degree of clinical certainty (i.e., based on "strength of evidence Class I" or overwhelming evidence from "strength of evidence Class II" studies that directly address all the issues)
Level B recommendations. Recommendations for patient management that may identify a particular strategy or range of management strategies that reflect moderate clinical certainty (i.e., based on "strength of evidence Class II" studies that directly address the issue, decision analysis that directly addresses the issue, or strong consensus of "strength of evidence Class III" studies)
Level C recommendations. Other strategies for patient management based on preliminary, inconclusive, or conflicting evidence, or, in the absence of any published literature, based on panel consensus
There are certain circumstances in which the recommendations stemming from a body of evidence should not be rated as highly as the individual studies on which they are based. Factors such as heterogeneity of results, uncertainty about effect magnitude and consequences, strength of prior beliefs, and publication bias, among others, might lead to such a downgrading of recommendations.