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Treatment of Seizures and Postanoxic Status Epilepticus.

Seminars in Neurology 2017 Februrary
Seizures are a common occurrence following cardiac arrest and may occur both during targeted temperature management and after rewarming. Postanoxic seizures may be nonconvulsive and very difficult to diagnose without electroencephalography (EEG) or associated with prominent myoclonus. Importantly, to date no randomized controlled trials are available to guide the management of seizures in patients with cardiac arrest. Seizure prophylaxis is not recommended, and when seizures are diagnosed they are typically treated the same as seizures in other patients with acute brain injury. Electroencephalographic abnormalities that are highly epileptiform, but do not fulfill classic seizure criteria, also known as the ictal-interictal continuum, occur frequently and there is no consensus on how to treat these. Several EEG patterns have been associated with poor outcome in retrospective studies. Increasing evidence has emerged that patients may have a favorable outcome, even with status myoclonus and malignant EEG patterns, if aggressive management is pursued.

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