Refractory status epilepticus (RSE) is defined as status epilepticus that continues despite aggressive treatment. A 9.8-year-old boy with a past history of daily left focal motor seizures was transferred to University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) Hospital in pentobarbital coma after 4 days in RSE. The RSE was treated with very high doses of all appropriate antiepileptic drugs (AEDs), alone and in combination. The pentobarbital was titrated to burst suppression on EEG, but whenever pentobarbital was decreased, the seizures recurred. An ictal positron tomography scan of glucose metabolism demonstrated a right frontal area of hypermetabolism corresponding to an epileptic focus on EEG and magnetic resonance lesion. Eight days after the boy was admitted to UCLA, the right frontal focus was surgically removed, with immediate control of the status epilepticus. Whereas before onset of RSE, he had daily focal seizures, the boy has been seizure-free postoperatively for greater than 1 year. Operative treatment should be considered in patients with RSE in whom a focus of seizure onset can be demonstrated and who are reasonably considered surgical candidates.
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