My Daughter's Seizures
Essay by review • February 5, 2011 • Research Paper • 4,104 Words (17 Pages) • 1,363 Views
Siezures Wisdom
GENERALIZED TONIC-CLONIC - (also called Grand Mal)
Sudden cry, fall, rigidity, followed by muscle jerks, shallow breathing or temporarily suspended breathing, bluish skin, possible loss of bladder or bowel control, usually lasts a couple of minutes. Normal breathing then starts again. There may be some confusion and/or fatigue, followed by return to full consciousness.
Comments:
Protect head from injury.
Turn on side to keep airway clear.
Don't restrain
ABSENCE - (also called Petit Mal)
A blank stare, beginning and ending abruptly, lasting only a few seconds, most common in children. May be chewing movement of the mouth. Child is unaware of what's going on during the seizure but quickly returns to full awareness once it has stopped. May result in learning difficulties if not recognized and treated.
Comments:
No first aid necessary
Daydreaming
Lack of attention
SIMPLE PARTIAL
Jerking may begin in one area of body, arm, leg or face. Can't be stopped but patient stays awake. Jerking may proceed from one area of the body to another, and sometimes spreads to become a convulsive seizure.
Partial sensory seizure may not be obvious to an onlooker. Patient experiences a distorted environment. May see or hear things that aren't there, may feel unexplained fear, sadness, anger or joy. May have nausea, experience odd smells, and have a generally "funny" feeling in the stomach.
Comments:
Acting out bizarre behavior
Hysteria
COMPLEX PARTIAL - (also called Psychomotor or Temporal Lobe)
Usually starts with blank stare, followed by chewing followed by random activity. Person appears unaware of surroundings. May seem dazed and mumble. Unresponsive. Actions clumsy, not directed. May pick at clothing, pick up objects, try to take clothes off. May run, appear afraid. May struggle. Once pattern established same set of actions usually occur with each seizure. Lasts a few minutes, but post-seizure confusion can last substantially longer. No memory of what happened during seizure period.
Comments:
Drunkenness
Guide gently away from obvious hazards
Don't shout
Don't restrain
ATONIC SEIZURES - (also called Drop Attacks)
A child or adult suddenly collapses and falls, after ten seconds to a minute recovers, regains consciousness and can stand and walk again.
Comments:
Clumsiness
Normal childhood "stages"
In a child, lack of good walking skills
MYOCLONIC SEIZURES
Sudden brief, massive muscle jerks that may involve the whole body or parts of the body. May cause person to spill what they were holding or fall off a chair.
Comments:
Clumsiness
Poor coordination
INFANTILE SPASMS
These are clusters of quick, sudden movement that start between three months and two years. If a child is sitting up, the head will fall forward, and the arms will flex forward. If laying down, the knees will be drawn up, with arms and head flexed forward as if the baby is reaching for support.
Comments:
Normal movements of the baby
Colic
Your daughter either needs more tegretal or a supplement or replacement w/ another drug. My daughter has been on phenobarbital for over 6 years. She got pretty good control but it required humongous amounts of the drug (about 130 mg per ml each night). It became apparent to us last year that the phenobarbital was delaying her developmental progress. She is now on lamictal & we are in the process of slowly weaning her off the phenobarbital. Already she is starting to become more alert. For us personally, breakthrough seizures are not acceptable, especially since it usually means Angel lands in the hospital. She is on 2 tablets in the a.m. & 2 in the p.m. of lamictal (25mg per tablet) The nuero selected lamictal based on her EEG and the fact that lamictal has relatively few side effects as compared to many other drugs.
My daughter is now 14 months old. She is about 12 1/2 lbs. She started w/ blinking also - we didn't do anything about that. It was periodically. Then had seizure where right side started thrashing (associated w/ high fever). She was given Ativan at the hospital to stop it. No regular meds yet b/c it was her first one. Next seizure, same thing w/ right side moving - given Valium - (too much and had to be intubated!). Again, seizure was fever related and docs did not put her on any meds. After her third febrile seizure, (she had an ear infection and high fever) she was put on phenobarbitol (3 mg. 2 x per day). Has been on it for 6 weeks. Doc said to start reducing it. We took it down to 2.5 mg. She had another seizure and a fever of 103. She is now back on it at a dose of 3.3 mg. 2 x per day. Everything A-OK for now. We just really have to monitor her - fevers, colds, etc. She also has been teething which we were told caused the high fever and had bronchiolitis.
My daughter was put on phenobarb when she was 9 months old for seizures after her second seizure. Her first was brought on by an allergic reaction to the P part of the DPT vaccine (old version). She was death gray with the first one and scared me to death. Her second seizure was out of the blue she was not ill at the time. She was started on a low dose of phenobarb at the time. Her third seizure was a month later with a temp of 107 degrees. Yes you read right. The heat index was 110 that day and she almost got that high. The neurologist that we met with the 3 seizure wrote her a prescription for air conditioning and Medicaid ended up paying for the unit for her. I had to jump through a lot of hoops to get this done but I managed it. They increased her dose and it took 3 people to give her the nasty tasting
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