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The Resus Room

Paediatric Seizures; Roadside to Resus

The Resus Room

Simon Laing

Medicine, Science, Health & Fitness

4.9708 Ratings

🗓️ 14 January 2026

⏱️ 72 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Paediatric seizures are common, time-critical events and they're something most of us will deal with, whether that's pre-hospital, in the emergency department, or on the ward. They make up around 1–2% of ED attendances, and about 1 in 20 children will have a seizure at some point. Most seizures self-terminate, but the longer they go on the harder they are to stop, and the higher the risk of harm. In paediatric seizures, time really matters.

In this episode we take a step-by-step look at how to assess and manage a child who's seizing. We start with the fundamentals; how seizures are defined and classified, what status epilepticus actually means in practice, and why recognising it early makes such a difference.

We then dig into the physiology behind seizures, exploring why early benzodiazepines work well and why delayed treatment often doesn't. Understanding what's happening at a receptor level helps make sense of when to escalate treatment and why different drugs work at different stages of a prolonged seizure.

Pharmacology is a big part of this episode. We talk through first- and second-line anti-seizure medications, routes of administration, and how effective they really are. We cover the EcLiPSE and ConSEPT trials comparing levetiracetam and phenytoin, and look at newer evidence from the Ket-Mid study and what that might mean for managing refractory status and thinking about RSI.

We also work through the approach to cases, pre-hospital management and in-hospital care aligned with UK and European recommendations. There's a clear focus on febrile seizures too, separating simple from complex presentations and helping you decide who needs investigating, admitting, or reassuring and discharging.

As ever, the aim is to turn guidelines and evidence into something usable on the shop floor. Paediatric seizures are stressful, but with a structured approach, early treatment, and good airway management, they're absolutely manageable and we can make a real difference on outcomes.

Once again we'd love to hear any thoughts or feedback either on the website or via X @TheResusRoom!

Simon, Rob & James

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to the Recess Room podcast.

0:03.5

Five, four, three, two, one, fire.

0:12.3

So hi, and welcome back to the Reeser Room podcast.

0:15.4

I'm Simon Lang.

0:17.0

I'm Rob Fenwick.

0:18.3

And I'm James Yates.

0:19.5

And this is our first roadside to recess of 2026

0:23.5

And it's on paediatric seizures

0:26.1

Absolutely Simon

0:28.0

It is indeed on paediatric seizures

0:30.0

And this is going to be a big episode

0:31.9

Which is also amazing

0:33.5

Because it marks our 10 year anniversary

0:36.2

Doesn't it gentlemen

0:37.2

What a lovely thought when I look in the mirror. I'm pretty sure when I started out, far more hair and far less than it was great, if that makes sense. But what an achievement, boys. Well done. Still here. Still kicking. It's absolutely remarkable, isn't it? I'm just sort of blown away, really. I'm not quite sure where those 10 years have gone.

1:10.5

I would say it's sort of flown by, but to be honest with you two, it's dragged quite a lot. Like an anchor, just dragging on the seabed. I'm also sad that I'm still sitting in the same office. You know, I haven't upgraded to some sort of penthouse suite, you know, with views taking in my estate. but maybe it's coming.

1:12.3

I don't think it is,

1:14.1

but it's always good to have aspirations, though.

1:11.5

And we've just been

1:15.3

chatting before we started recording about our New Year's resolutions and exciting things

1:19.3

for 2026, like a new backpack in the Lange household. So we'll be sure to share some really

1:26.5

exciting facts like that throughout the podcast.

...

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