Susan Smith
Yorkshire Dioceses, UK
Title: Assessment of state of convulsive child in Hospital National Children Albert Royer, Dakar
Biography
Biography: Susan Smith
Abstract
Introduction: The state of epilepticus in children is considered as a medical emergency which involves the vital and functional prognosis of the patient. The difficulties of this support in our country are linked to the lack of pediatric intensive care unit. The aim of our study is to evaluate the clinical, therapeutic, scalable and etiological states of epilepticus in children at national Refferal Hospital of Mulago in Uganda National Children, Uganda.
Method: This is a prospective study which includes all patients aged between 2 months and 16 years who were hospitalized between 1 January 2001 and 31 June, 2015 for a prolonged convulsion over 5 minutes and/ or with atleast 3 episodes of successive convulsions. We have not included the newborns and non-convulsive state epilepticus patients. The treatment protocol consists of the use of diazepam as first line, after 60 minutes if the crisis persists; diazepam Phenobarbital was associated with the second line.
Results: We collected 60 cases of state epilepticus (31 boys and 29 girls), which turned out to be a hospital incidence 0f 2.4%. The mean age was 48.5 months. Three quarters of our patients (n=40) were received emergency beyond 30 minutes after the onset of convulsions where the generalized seizures (n=42) were more than partial seizures (n=11). The convulsions occurred in the context of fever in 38 patients. The metabolic balance was in favor of hyponetremia in 13 cases. Twenty-four patients (45.3%) have received only Phenobarbital diazepam combination within 60 minutes after the onset of seizures. Conclusions: The state epilepticus cases are frequent in the hospital emergency department especially the infants from 2 months to 3 years. It was observed that the patients unfortunately received emergency in late beyond 30 minutes after the onset of convulsions.