Episode 964: Ketamine & Midazolam for Prehospital Seizure Management
Release Date: 07/07/2025
Emergency Medical Minute
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Carepoint Journal Club is a quarterly series with discussions about a medical topic, brought to you by Carepoint's Emergency Physicians.
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Contributors: Preeya Prakash MD, Adam Greenhaw PharmD, Travis Barlock MD, and Jeffrey Olson MS4 In this episode, cardiologist Preeya Prakash and medical student Jeffrey Olson listen in as two cases are presented from EMM’s recent event, Tox Talk 2025. Talk 1- Digoxin Overdose Dr. Adam Greenhaw presents a case of a Digoxin overdose along with many pearls. During the studio listen in, Dr. Prakash helps to answer the questions of: How does digoxin work? Why might a patient still be on digoxin in 2025? What are the EKG findings of digoxin toxicity? Is there any utility in atropine...
info_outlineContributor: Aaron Lessen, MD
Educational Pearls:
- Prehospital seizures are typically managed with intramuscular midazolam (Versed)
- Seizures theoretically involve the NMDA pathway, and ketamine is a potent NMDA antagonist
- A recent retrospective cohort study analyzed a Florida EMS protocol that uses ketamine in seizures refractory to midazolam
- One group received two doses of midazolam for seizure control
- The other group received a dose of midazolam followed by a dose of ketamine
- After matching, 82% of the midazolam-only group patients had resolution of convulsions prior to ED arrival
- 94.4% of patients in the midazolam + ketamine group experienced resolution
- Absolute difference between groups was 12.4% (95% CI 3.1% to 21.7%)
- Limitations to the study include its prehospital setting and limited long-term follow-up
References
- Zitek T, Scheppke KA, Antevy P, et al. Midazolam and Ketamine for Convulsive Status Epilepticus in the Out-of-Hospital Setting. Ann Emerg Med. 2025;85(4):305-312. doi:10.1016/j.annemergmed.2024.11.002
Summarized & Edited by Jorge Chalit, OMS4
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