4.5 Article

Factors associated with resistance to benzodiazepines in status epilepticus

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE NEUROLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume 423, Issue -, Pages -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jns.2021.117368

Keywords

Status epilepticus; Epilepsy; Benzodiazepines; Etiology; Prognosis

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The study showed that factors like etiology and symptomatology of SE influence the response to BZD treatment. Prompt administration was associated with faster resolution in patients with prominent motor symptoms, chronic structural lesions, or history of epilepsy.
Objective: To investigate factors related to benzodiazepine (BZD) resistance in status epilepticus (SE) with a focus on their relationship with the etiology of the episode. Methods: All SE cases in patients aged > 16 years treated with BZDs were prospectively collected in our center from February 2011 to April 2019. The registry included demographics, SE type and etiology, the timing and duration of BZD administration, and the outcome. In total, 371 episodes were analyzed. Results: Median age at SE onset was 61.3 years; the most frequent etiology was acute symptomatic (55.8%). SE with prominent motor symptoms occurred in 63.3%. Median time to BZD administration was 2 h. We studied the correlation between two-time variables: time from SE onset to BZD administration and time from BZD administration to resolution of SE (response); we observed that timely administration correlated with a faster response in patients with prominent motor symptoms (p = 0.017), SE due to a chronic structural cerebral lesion (p = 0.004), and patients with a history of seizures (p = 0.013). In these subgroups (prominent motor symptoms or chronic structural lesion) BZD administration within the first 4.5 h was highly associated with shorter post-BZD SE duration (p < 0.001). Significance: The relationship between prompt BZD administration and subsequent duration of SE was found to depend to some extent on the etiology of the episode: patients with chronic structural lesions and those with previous epilepsy responded faster to BZDs. Semiology may have also its impact, as the presence of prominent motor symptoms showed also a faster response.

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