View clinical trials related to Neonatal Seizures.
Filter by:The current project undertakes a prospective multicentre randomised controlled trial to evaluate whether full or continuous electroencephalography (cEEG) is superior to amplitude-integrated electroencephalography (aEEG) in the real time evaluation and diagnosis of neonatal seizures and in reducing time to treatment. At-risk new-born infants will be recruited on the participating neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) by trained specialist staff and will have 24 hours of EEG monitoring.
Over the last three decades, several tools have been developed to enhance the detection and treatment of neonatal seizures. Regarding treatment, phenobarbital maintains is still used as a first-line therapy worldwide. However, newer anti-epileptic drugs (AED) s such as, levetiracetam, bumetanide, and topiramate are increasingly being applied to the neonatal population, offering the potential for seizure treatment with a significantly better side-effect profile. Levetiracetam is a very promising medication for the treatment of neonatal seizures. It has been in clinical use for almost a decade in adults and older children with good efficacy, an excellent safety profile and near ideal pharmacokinetic characteristics. It has been approved and used for treatment of seizures in infants starting one month of age since 2012. The investigators are comparing the efficacy of levetiracetam to that of phenobarbital as a first-line drug in control of neonatal seizures. The investigators monitor the efficacy through assessment of frequency of seizures before and after drug administration, amplitude integrated EEG changes in background activity and seizure frequency in participants, duration taken for participants to be seizure free and short term neurodevelopmental outcome and EEG at 3 months of age