Young G B, Gilbert J J, Zochodne D W
Department of Clinical Neurological Sciences, Victoria Hospital, London, ON, Canada.
Neurology. 1990 Dec;40(12):1843-8. doi: 10.1212/wnl.40.12.1843.
We report 11 adults who exhibited myoclonic status epilepticus (MSE) after cardiac arrest. Based on pathologic, electroencephalographic, and clinical evidence, we conclude that our patients died from the initial anoxic-ischemic insult rather than as a result of MSE. We suggest that the seizures in these nonsurvivors were self-limited events arising from lethal damage to neurons. Thus, in patients with bilaterally synchronous facial myoclonus, bilateral loss of pupillary or oculovestibular reflexes, and suppression and burst-suppression on EEG, it is not warranted to use anesthetic barbiturates to treat MSE.