Seizures are the bread and butter of the neurological consult service. Gaining proficiency in the workup and management of first-time seizures makes a young neurologist’s life much easier. To shed some light on this topic, I sit down with the incredible Dr. Brian Day, an Epileptologist at Washington University, to discuss the ins and outs of first-time seizure management. Dr. Day got his MD and PhD at the University of Kentucky and completed his neurology training at Washington University. He then did a fellowship in Epilepsy and currently works treating patients with seizure disorders.
1:00: My experience with epilepsy5:23: Why neurology12:13: What did you study for your PhD?16:43: Why epilepsy?21:53: What do you like to do in your free time?25:53: Patient case of new onset seizure27:57: What is a seizure?30:16: How can you tell if shaking is a seizure?37:45: Non-epileptic events41:41: Provoked vs unprovoked seizures42:53: Medications that can provoke a seizure47:38: Can certain longstanding medications cause seizures?49:25: How to counsel seizure patients about alcohol consumption51:58: Acute symptomatic vs remote seizures56:08: Neuroimaging for new onset seizure58:43: Screening for mesial temporal sclerosis59:53: What to look for on brain MRI1:00:53: What to look for on EEG1:05:53: Lab workup/when to get a lumbar puncture1:07:46: Can a UTI provoke a seizure?1:12:08: Focal vs generalized seizures1:13:44: Neurological exam for seizures1:16:52: Do multiple seizures in a day change prognosis?1:19:13: Role of serum lactate/prolactin1:21:08: When do you start antiepileptics?1:23:43: What to do with an abnormal EEG1:25:05: Deep vs cortical brain MRI lesions and seizure risk1:28:08: How to manage unprovoked seizure patients older than 601:30:19: Benzo bridges1:32:43: Follow up for patients1:33:46: Counseling patients with first time seizures1:37:43: SummaryDr. Day report no relevant financial disclosures. Brain Boy Neurology reports no relevant financial disclosures.