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STATUS EPILEPTICUS
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY &
PROGNOSIS
ARUN MATHAI MANI
DEFINITION OF STATUS
EPILEPTICUS
• Gastaut - 1962 - first international meeting on
SE, the Xth Marseilles Colloquium
• defined SE - whenever a seizure persists for a
sufficient length of time or is repeated
frequently enough to produce a fixed or
enduring epileptic condition
• He suggested that the diagnosis of SE requires
30–60 min of enduring epileptic condition
• Traditionally defined as 30 minutes of
continuous seizure activity or multiple
seizures without return to neurologic baseline
Duration of seizures
• Why 30 min ???
• repetitive seizures become self-sustaining and
pharmacoresistant and can lead to neuronal
injury within 15–30 min
• 30 min - Epilepsy Foundation of America’s
Working Group on Status Epilepticus
• 10 min - Veterans Affairs Status Epilepticus
Cooperation Study
Operational / Working Definition
• need for definition of SE that does not delay
therapeutic intervention and thereby prevent
irreversible damage
• Typical seizures last up to 3 to 5 minutes
before being stopped by the intrinsic
inhibitory mechanisms
• Seizures lasting longer than 5 minutes are less
likely to end without an external intervention
• Operational / Working Defenition - Stipulates
the treatment of convulsive status epilepticus
within 5 min of seizure onset
Refractory and Super-refractory SE
• Refractory status epilepticus is defined as
seizures that continue despite first- and
second line treatments
• Super-refractory status epilepticus occurs
when third-line agents (IV anesthetics) fail
The sequential phases of SE
• Clark and Prout
• basic mechanisms of SE in animal models and
in clinical situations
• described the natural course of status
epilepticus in patients unaffected by
anticonvulsants
• impending SE
• established SE
• subtle SE
Early or impending status
epilepticus
• continuous or intermittent seizures lasting
more than 5 min, without full recovery of
consciousness between seizures
• need intravenous high-dose anticonvulsants -
risk of developing SE is high
• corresponds with the 5 min operational
definition of SE
• mean duration of generalised convulsive
seizures in adults ranges from 62¡2 s to 52¡9 s
(SD 14) for the behavioural symptoms, and
averages 59¡9 s (SD 12) for the
electroencephalographic changes
• impending status - duration of seizures is 18–
20 SD away from the norm of a single seizure -
indicating that something distinctly unusual
and severe is happening
Established status epilepticus
• clinical or electrographic seizures lasting more
than 30 min without full recovery of
consciousness between seizures
• cut-off at 30 min –
• status has become self sustaining in
experimental animals
• status-epilepticus-induced damage is distinct
• pharmacoresistance has developed
• Animal data - after 30 min of perforant path
stimulation, all animals were in established
status epilepticus
• 30 min of continuous seizures - accepted as
the defining duration of status epilepticus in
both clinical practice and clinical trials
Subtle status epilepticus
• Subtle SE - prolonged SE, both the motor and
electroencephalographic expression of
seizures become less florid
• prognostic and therapeutic implications –
same as convulsive status epilepticus
Aetiology
• low blood concentrations of antiepileptic
drugs in patients with chronic epilepsy (34%)
• remote symptomatic causes (24%)
• cerebrovascular accidents (22%)
• anoxia or hypoxia (~10%)
• metabolic causes (~10%)
• Alcohol and drug withdrawal (~10%).
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
Basic mechanisms: current
concepts
• fundamental principle - failure of endogenous
mechanisms to terminate a seizure
• Excessive abnormal excitation during a seizure
• Loss of endogenous inhibitory mechanisms
• allow a single seizure to transform into status
epilepticus
• contribute to the self-perpetuating nature and
pharmaco-resistance
• Excitation can come from many sources -
• established epileptogenic circuit from
preexisting epilepsy
• Region surrounding a structural lesion
• diffuse excitation from a toxic/metabolic state
Perforant Path in SE
• The entorhinal cortex provides the major
excitatory input to the hippocampus
• Travel through the perforant pathway along
the parahippocampal gyrus to the neurons in
the dentate gyrus
• The dentate is often the brake for excitatory
activity
• But when overwhelmed, excitatory activity
feeds back to the hippocampus and then back
to the parahippocampal gyrus
• Self-amplifying reverberating circuit that
perpetuates status epilepticus
classic example
• status epilepticus in people after the
accidental ingestion of mussels contaminated
with domoic acid (analogue the glutamate)
• Supported the notion - excess excitation can
contribute to the development of seizures and
status epilepticus
Pathophysiology and neuronal
injury
• continuum of maladaptive changes
• transition from a single seizure to status
epilepticus
• self-sustaining nature of SE
Self-sustaining SE
• distinguishing feature of SE - self sustaining
• In most electrical and chemical animal models
of SE - seizures rapidly become self-sustaining
despite the withdrawal of the epileptogenic
stimulus
• Human data - far less clear, seizures which last
more than 30 min rarely stop spontaneously
• The initiation of SSSE - easily blocked by many
drugs that increase inhibition or reduce
excitation
• which directly or indirectly inhibit
glutamatergic neurotransmission
• once SSSE is established - maintained by
underlying changes that do not depend on
continuous seizures activity
Animal Model
• After 30 min of intermittent stimulation of an
excitatory glutamatergic pathway (PPS) in the
rat
• stopping the stimulation no longer stops
electrographic or behavioral seizures
Features of SSSE induced by 30
min perforant path stimulation
(PPS)Representative course of
spikes
Electrographic
activity in the dentate gyrus
Time-dependent
pharmacoresistance
• Another unique feature
• progressive, time-dependent development of
pharmacoresistance
• the potency of benzodiazepines may decrease
20-fold in 30 min of SSSE
• Phenytoin also loses potency, but more slowly
• By contrast, even late in its course, NMDA
blockers continue to be effective in stopping
SSSE
Animal Model
• Pharmacological studies in animals - two
distinct phases of SSSE
• initiation phase and maintenance phase
• initiation phase - can be easily blocked by
many pharmacological agents which enhance
inhibition or reduce excitation
• SSSE- maintained by underlying changes
which do not depend on continuous seizure
activity
• effectively terminated by only a few agents,
most of which inhibit glutamatergic
neurotransmission
The effects of an NMDA receptor
blocker
Pathophysiology of self-sustaining
status epilepticus
• Repeated seizures produce broad and
complex cascades of pathophysiological and
biochemical changes in the brain
• The first milliseconds to seconds are
dominated by the
• consequences of protein phosphorylation
• Ionic channels open and close
• neurotransmitters and modulators are
released, and receptor desensitisation takes
place
Cascade of selected mechanisms
involved in the transition of a
single seizure to status epilepticus
RECEPTOR TRAFFICKING
Trafficking of GABA and glutamate
receptors
• receptor trafficking causes some key
adaptations
• mainly of the GABA and glutamate receptors
• Immunocytochemical studies of the gamma 2
and beta2–3 subunits of the GABAa receptors
• decrease in the number of subunits present
on the synaptic membrane and an increase in
the interior of the cell
Intracellular distribution of GABAa
in hippocampal neurons from
Control SE
• Endocytosis and the decrease in functional
GABAa receptors in the synaptic cleft
• failure of GABAa inhibition
• progressive, time-dependent
pharmacoresistance to benzodiazepines
• Immunocytochemical studies - NR1 subunits
of NMDA receptors move from subsynaptic
sites to the synaptic surface
• physiological investigations show -increase in
functional NMDA receptors per dentate
granule cell synapse
Subcellular distribution of NMDA
NR1 subunits with SE
• AMPA and NMDA receptor subunits are
recruited to the synaptic membrane
• form additional excitatory receptors
• further enhances excitability in the midst of
uninhibited seizures
Receptor trafficking in transition of single
seizures to status epilepticus
Endocytosis of GABAa
receptors Exocytosis of NMDA receptors
• NMDA blockers remain highly efficient in
stopping the disorder, even late in its course
• Extrasynaptic GABAa receptors - do not
endocytose
• neurosteroids - used to stimulate these
extrasynaptic receptors - might be useful in
the treatment of SE
Maladaptive changes in
neuropeptide expression
• During SSSE, depletion in hippocampus of the
predominantly inhibitory peptides
• Dynorphin
• Galanin
• Somatostatin
• neuropeptide Y
• expression of the proconvulsant tachykinins is
increased
• substance P
• neurokinin B
• slower to develop than the receptor
trafficking
• Tilt the balance between hippocampal
excitation and inhibition in favor of excitation
• play a role in maintaining self-sustaining
Galanin-like immunoreactivity in
the hippocampus
Genetic and epigenetic changes
• both increased and decreased expression of
numerous genes
• may contribute to the process of
epileptogenesis
• Epigenetic changes – genomewide alterations
in hippocampal cell DNA methylation, Altered
regulation of microRNA which regulates post-
transcriptional gene expression
Seizure-induced neuronal injury
and death
• seizures per se cause neuronal loss - results
from excessive neuronal firing through
excitotoxic mechanisms
• SSSE - induce widespread neuronal death,
mostly necrotic and associated with
mitochondrial dysfunction
• apoptotic death also does happen
Animal Studies
• convulsive seizures induced in baboons
-hyperthermia, hypotension, and hypoxia
• neuronal injury in the thalami, hippocampi,
and neocortex
• Paralysis of the baboons to prevent convulsive
activity - only partial protection against
neuronal injury
• non-convulsive electrographic seizures can
result in neuronal damage and cell death
• Evidence in human beings is largely anecdotal
• brain damage is often seen in patients who
die from status epilepticus
• Patients who die from SE show brain lesions
and decreased neuronal density in the
hippocampus
• Neuron-specific enolase, a marker of neuronal
death, is increased in the serum of patients
after SE
• MRI studies - cerebral edema acutely and
atrophy chronically after SE
• presence of focal atrophy in areas of intensive
seizure activity supports a causal link between
seizures and cell loss
• SE induced by domoic acid poisoning showed
neuronal loss at autopsy
PROGNOSIS
Factors associated with poor
outcome
• Age ≥60 years
• longer duration of SE
• lack of past history of seizures
• low Glasgow coma scale score at admission
• type of SE
• acute symptomatic aetiology
• presence of periodic lateralized epileptiform
discharges on EEG
Status
Epilepticus Severity Score
• Four outcome predictors
• Age
• History of seizures
• Seizure type
• extent of consciousness impairment
• easily and quickly measurable as well as
reproducible
• A favorable score is 0–2
Epidemiology-Based Mortality Score in Status Epilepticus
(EMSE)
References
• Chen JW, Naylor DE, Wasterlain CG. Advances
in the pathophysiology of status epilepticus.
Acta Neurol Scand Suppl 2007; 186: 7–15
• Betjemann JP, Lowenstein DH. Status
epilepticus in adults. Lancet Neurol. 2015
Jun;14(6):615-24
• Chen JW, Wasterlain CG. Status epilepticus:
pathophysiology and management in adults.
Lancet Neurol. 2006 Mar;5(3):246-56
• Rossetti AO, Logroscino G, Milligan TA,
Michaelides C, Ruffieux C,Bromfi eld EB.
Status Epilepticus Severity Score (STESS): a
tool to orient early treatment strategy. J
Neurol 2008; 255: 1561–66

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Status Epilepticus

  • 3. • Gastaut - 1962 - first international meeting on SE, the Xth Marseilles Colloquium • defined SE - whenever a seizure persists for a sufficient length of time or is repeated frequently enough to produce a fixed or enduring epileptic condition • He suggested that the diagnosis of SE requires 30–60 min of enduring epileptic condition
  • 4. • Traditionally defined as 30 minutes of continuous seizure activity or multiple seizures without return to neurologic baseline
  • 5. Duration of seizures • Why 30 min ??? • repetitive seizures become self-sustaining and pharmacoresistant and can lead to neuronal injury within 15–30 min • 30 min - Epilepsy Foundation of America’s Working Group on Status Epilepticus • 10 min - Veterans Affairs Status Epilepticus Cooperation Study
  • 6. Operational / Working Definition • need for definition of SE that does not delay therapeutic intervention and thereby prevent irreversible damage • Typical seizures last up to 3 to 5 minutes before being stopped by the intrinsic inhibitory mechanisms • Seizures lasting longer than 5 minutes are less likely to end without an external intervention
  • 7. • Operational / Working Defenition - Stipulates the treatment of convulsive status epilepticus within 5 min of seizure onset
  • 8. Refractory and Super-refractory SE • Refractory status epilepticus is defined as seizures that continue despite first- and second line treatments • Super-refractory status epilepticus occurs when third-line agents (IV anesthetics) fail
  • 9. The sequential phases of SE • Clark and Prout • basic mechanisms of SE in animal models and in clinical situations • described the natural course of status epilepticus in patients unaffected by anticonvulsants • impending SE • established SE • subtle SE
  • 10. Early or impending status epilepticus • continuous or intermittent seizures lasting more than 5 min, without full recovery of consciousness between seizures • need intravenous high-dose anticonvulsants - risk of developing SE is high • corresponds with the 5 min operational definition of SE
  • 11. • mean duration of generalised convulsive seizures in adults ranges from 62¡2 s to 52¡9 s (SD 14) for the behavioural symptoms, and averages 59¡9 s (SD 12) for the electroencephalographic changes • impending status - duration of seizures is 18– 20 SD away from the norm of a single seizure - indicating that something distinctly unusual and severe is happening
  • 12. Established status epilepticus • clinical or electrographic seizures lasting more than 30 min without full recovery of consciousness between seizures • cut-off at 30 min – • status has become self sustaining in experimental animals • status-epilepticus-induced damage is distinct • pharmacoresistance has developed
  • 13. • Animal data - after 30 min of perforant path stimulation, all animals were in established status epilepticus • 30 min of continuous seizures - accepted as the defining duration of status epilepticus in both clinical practice and clinical trials
  • 14. Subtle status epilepticus • Subtle SE - prolonged SE, both the motor and electroencephalographic expression of seizures become less florid • prognostic and therapeutic implications – same as convulsive status epilepticus
  • 15. Aetiology • low blood concentrations of antiepileptic drugs in patients with chronic epilepsy (34%) • remote symptomatic causes (24%) • cerebrovascular accidents (22%) • anoxia or hypoxia (~10%) • metabolic causes (~10%) • Alcohol and drug withdrawal (~10%).
  • 17. Basic mechanisms: current concepts • fundamental principle - failure of endogenous mechanisms to terminate a seizure • Excessive abnormal excitation during a seizure • Loss of endogenous inhibitory mechanisms • allow a single seizure to transform into status epilepticus • contribute to the self-perpetuating nature and pharmaco-resistance
  • 18. • Excitation can come from many sources - • established epileptogenic circuit from preexisting epilepsy • Region surrounding a structural lesion • diffuse excitation from a toxic/metabolic state
  • 19. Perforant Path in SE • The entorhinal cortex provides the major excitatory input to the hippocampus • Travel through the perforant pathway along the parahippocampal gyrus to the neurons in the dentate gyrus
  • 20.
  • 21. • The dentate is often the brake for excitatory activity • But when overwhelmed, excitatory activity feeds back to the hippocampus and then back to the parahippocampal gyrus • Self-amplifying reverberating circuit that perpetuates status epilepticus
  • 22. classic example • status epilepticus in people after the accidental ingestion of mussels contaminated with domoic acid (analogue the glutamate) • Supported the notion - excess excitation can contribute to the development of seizures and status epilepticus
  • 23.
  • 24. Pathophysiology and neuronal injury • continuum of maladaptive changes • transition from a single seizure to status epilepticus • self-sustaining nature of SE
  • 25. Self-sustaining SE • distinguishing feature of SE - self sustaining • In most electrical and chemical animal models of SE - seizures rapidly become self-sustaining despite the withdrawal of the epileptogenic stimulus • Human data - far less clear, seizures which last more than 30 min rarely stop spontaneously
  • 26. • The initiation of SSSE - easily blocked by many drugs that increase inhibition or reduce excitation • which directly or indirectly inhibit glutamatergic neurotransmission • once SSSE is established - maintained by underlying changes that do not depend on continuous seizures activity
  • 27. Animal Model • After 30 min of intermittent stimulation of an excitatory glutamatergic pathway (PPS) in the rat • stopping the stimulation no longer stops electrographic or behavioral seizures
  • 28. Features of SSSE induced by 30 min perforant path stimulation (PPS)Representative course of spikes Electrographic activity in the dentate gyrus
  • 29. Time-dependent pharmacoresistance • Another unique feature • progressive, time-dependent development of pharmacoresistance • the potency of benzodiazepines may decrease 20-fold in 30 min of SSSE • Phenytoin also loses potency, but more slowly • By contrast, even late in its course, NMDA blockers continue to be effective in stopping SSSE
  • 30. Animal Model • Pharmacological studies in animals - two distinct phases of SSSE • initiation phase and maintenance phase • initiation phase - can be easily blocked by many pharmacological agents which enhance inhibition or reduce excitation
  • 31. • SSSE- maintained by underlying changes which do not depend on continuous seizure activity • effectively terminated by only a few agents, most of which inhibit glutamatergic neurotransmission
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  • 33. The effects of an NMDA receptor blocker
  • 34. Pathophysiology of self-sustaining status epilepticus • Repeated seizures produce broad and complex cascades of pathophysiological and biochemical changes in the brain • The first milliseconds to seconds are dominated by the • consequences of protein phosphorylation • Ionic channels open and close • neurotransmitters and modulators are released, and receptor desensitisation takes place
  • 35. Cascade of selected mechanisms involved in the transition of a single seizure to status epilepticus
  • 37. Trafficking of GABA and glutamate receptors • receptor trafficking causes some key adaptations • mainly of the GABA and glutamate receptors • Immunocytochemical studies of the gamma 2 and beta2–3 subunits of the GABAa receptors • decrease in the number of subunits present on the synaptic membrane and an increase in the interior of the cell
  • 38. Intracellular distribution of GABAa in hippocampal neurons from Control SE
  • 39. • Endocytosis and the decrease in functional GABAa receptors in the synaptic cleft • failure of GABAa inhibition • progressive, time-dependent pharmacoresistance to benzodiazepines
  • 40. • Immunocytochemical studies - NR1 subunits of NMDA receptors move from subsynaptic sites to the synaptic surface • physiological investigations show -increase in functional NMDA receptors per dentate granule cell synapse
  • 41. Subcellular distribution of NMDA NR1 subunits with SE
  • 42. • AMPA and NMDA receptor subunits are recruited to the synaptic membrane • form additional excitatory receptors • further enhances excitability in the midst of uninhibited seizures
  • 43. Receptor trafficking in transition of single seizures to status epilepticus Endocytosis of GABAa receptors Exocytosis of NMDA receptors
  • 44. • NMDA blockers remain highly efficient in stopping the disorder, even late in its course • Extrasynaptic GABAa receptors - do not endocytose • neurosteroids - used to stimulate these extrasynaptic receptors - might be useful in the treatment of SE
  • 45. Maladaptive changes in neuropeptide expression • During SSSE, depletion in hippocampus of the predominantly inhibitory peptides • Dynorphin • Galanin • Somatostatin • neuropeptide Y
  • 46. • expression of the proconvulsant tachykinins is increased • substance P • neurokinin B • slower to develop than the receptor trafficking • Tilt the balance between hippocampal excitation and inhibition in favor of excitation • play a role in maintaining self-sustaining
  • 48. Genetic and epigenetic changes • both increased and decreased expression of numerous genes • may contribute to the process of epileptogenesis • Epigenetic changes – genomewide alterations in hippocampal cell DNA methylation, Altered regulation of microRNA which regulates post- transcriptional gene expression
  • 49. Seizure-induced neuronal injury and death • seizures per se cause neuronal loss - results from excessive neuronal firing through excitotoxic mechanisms • SSSE - induce widespread neuronal death, mostly necrotic and associated with mitochondrial dysfunction • apoptotic death also does happen
  • 50. Animal Studies • convulsive seizures induced in baboons -hyperthermia, hypotension, and hypoxia • neuronal injury in the thalami, hippocampi, and neocortex • Paralysis of the baboons to prevent convulsive activity - only partial protection against neuronal injury • non-convulsive electrographic seizures can result in neuronal damage and cell death
  • 51. • Evidence in human beings is largely anecdotal • brain damage is often seen in patients who die from status epilepticus • Patients who die from SE show brain lesions and decreased neuronal density in the hippocampus • Neuron-specific enolase, a marker of neuronal death, is increased in the serum of patients after SE
  • 52. • MRI studies - cerebral edema acutely and atrophy chronically after SE • presence of focal atrophy in areas of intensive seizure activity supports a causal link between seizures and cell loss • SE induced by domoic acid poisoning showed neuronal loss at autopsy
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  • 55. Factors associated with poor outcome • Age ≥60 years • longer duration of SE • lack of past history of seizures • low Glasgow coma scale score at admission • type of SE • acute symptomatic aetiology • presence of periodic lateralized epileptiform discharges on EEG
  • 56. Status Epilepticus Severity Score • Four outcome predictors • Age • History of seizures • Seizure type • extent of consciousness impairment • easily and quickly measurable as well as reproducible • A favorable score is 0–2
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  • 58.
  • 59. Epidemiology-Based Mortality Score in Status Epilepticus (EMSE)
  • 60. References • Chen JW, Naylor DE, Wasterlain CG. Advances in the pathophysiology of status epilepticus. Acta Neurol Scand Suppl 2007; 186: 7–15 • Betjemann JP, Lowenstein DH. Status epilepticus in adults. Lancet Neurol. 2015 Jun;14(6):615-24 • Chen JW, Wasterlain CG. Status epilepticus: pathophysiology and management in adults. Lancet Neurol. 2006 Mar;5(3):246-56
  • 61. • Rossetti AO, Logroscino G, Milligan TA, Michaelides C, Ruffieux C,Bromfi eld EB. Status Epilepticus Severity Score (STESS): a tool to orient early treatment strategy. J Neurol 2008; 255: 1561–66

Hinweis der Redaktion

  1. When administered before PPS, both diazepam (DZP) and phenytoin (PHT) very effectively blocked the development of SSSE On the right: When injected after the PPS, neither drug aborted SSSE, although they slightly shortened its duration
  2. Top row: Double-label immunocytochemistry in dentate and CA3 of control and SE animals using antibodies to GABAA b2/b3 subunits (red) and synaptophysin (green). Note the co-localization (yellow) of receptor subunits with presynaptic sites in controls (left) and greater internalization of receptor subunits during SE (right) Second row: Similar confocal image of granule cells using antibodies to GABAA c2 subunits (red) and synaptophysin (green).
  3. Hippocampal sections through the dentate gyrus of control (upper panels) and SE (lower panels) stained with an antibody against NMDA NR1 subunits (red, left panels) and an antibody against the presynaptic marker synaptophysin (green, middle panels). Overlaps between presynaptic synaptophysin and postsynaptic NR1 subunits appear yellow (right panels). Note increased NR1 subunit-LI colocalization with synaptophysin-LI for SE (right lower panel) compared to controls (right upper panel), suggesting trafficking of NMDA NR1 subunits towards the cell surface during SE
  4. Galanin-like immunoreactivity in the hippocampus of a control rat (A) and of an animal killed 3 h after the end of 30 min PPS, during SSSE (B) Notice a dense, fine network of galanin-immunoreactive fibers in the control rat, and their disappearance in the animal in SSSE