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Apex Nursing

Guide — Neurology

Seizure Nursing Care

Seizure care for nurses — types of seizures, pre-ictal, ictal, and postictal phases, safety priorities, airway protection, antiepileptic medications overview, documentation requirements, and patient education.

10 min read · Neurology

Educational use only. Status epilepticus (seizure lasting >5 minutes or recurrent seizures without recovery of consciousness) is a life-threatening emergency requiring immediate medical intervention. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Seizure Types Overview

TypeDescriptionLOCKey Feature
Focal (partial) — simpleOriginates in one brain region; no LOC impairmentPreservedMotor, sensory, or autonomic symptoms on one side
Focal — complex (focal impaired awareness)Focal onset with altered consciousnessImpairedAutomatisms (lip smacking, picking movements); post-ictal confusion
Absence (petit mal)Brief generalized; child or young adult; sudden blank stareBriefly impaired (seconds)No aura; no post-ictal; resumes activity immediately; may have eye fluttering
Tonic-clonic (grand mal)Generalized: tonic phase (stiffening) then clonic (rhythmic jerking)LostCyanosis possible; bladder incontinence; prolonged post-ictal
TonicSudden muscle stiffening without clonic phaseOften impairedFalls risk; no rhythmic jerking
Atonic (drop attack)Sudden muscle tone loss → patient dropsBriefly impairedHigh injury risk; helmet use in recurrent cases
MyoclonicBrief shock-like muscle jerks; usually bilateralOften preservedCan occur in clusters; common on waking
Status EpilepticusSeizure ≥5 min OR recurrent without recoveryLostMEDICAL EMERGENCY — treat immediately

Seizure Phases

Pre-Ictal (Aura)

Occurs just before seizure onset — a warning sign produced by focal neuronal discharge before generalization. Not all patients have an aura.

Findings

  • Visual aura: flashing lights, visual distortions
  • Sensory aura: tingling, smell, taste
  • Psychic aura: déjà vu, fear, rising sensation
  • Motor aura: focal twitching

Nursing Actions

  • Ask patient to sit or lie down immediately
  • Call for help; stay with patient
  • Clear the area of hazards
  • Note onset time and aura characteristics

Ictal (Active Seizure)

The active seizure phase. Duration and appearance depend on seizure type. The nurse's priority is safety.

Findings

  • Tonic-clonic: tonic stiffening followed by rhythmic jerking
  • LOC typically absent or impaired
  • Apnea, cyanosis, salivation possible
  • Incontinence may occur
  • Eyes may deviate to one side (gaze preference)

Nursing Actions

  • STAY with patient — do NOT leave
  • Note exact start time
  • Time the seizure (>5 min = status epilepticus)
  • Position: side-lying recovery position if possible
  • Protect head: cushion under head
  • Remove harmful objects from area
  • Do NOT restrain limbs (fracture risk)
  • Do NOT put anything in mouth — EVER
  • Call for help; prepare emergency medications

Post-Ictal

Recovery phase after seizure cessation. Can last minutes to hours. The brain is exhausted and recovering.

Findings

  • Confusion, disorientation
  • Lethargy, sleepiness
  • Headache, muscle ache
  • Todd's paralysis: transient focal weakness on one side (can last hours) — resolves spontaneously

Nursing Actions

  • Reassess airway, breathing, circulation
  • Maintain side-lying position until fully awake
  • Reorient the patient calmly and repeatedly
  • Assess for injury (head, tongue, extremities)
  • Reassess neurological status (GCS, focal deficits)
  • Document seizure details and recovery
  • Notify provider if first-time seizure, prolonged duration, or incomplete recovery

Safety During Seizure — The Don'ts

  • NEVER put anything in a seizing patient's mouth — no tongue blades, padded sticks, or fingers. Patients cannot “swallow their tongue” — this is a myth.
  • NEVER restrain limbs during active clonic phase — forced restraint causes fractures and dislocations.
  • NEVER leave the patient alone during or immediately after a seizure.
  • NEVER give oral medications during active seizure — aspiration risk.
  • NEVER apply physical restraints to a patient with a suspected seizure disorder as a routine fall-prevention measure.

Antiepileptic Medications Overview

MedicationUseKey Nursing Points
Lorazepam (Ativan) IVFirst-line for active seizure / status epilepticusRapid onset; monitor for respiratory depression; have airway ready
Diazepam (Valium) IV/rectalFirst-line if no IV access; rectal gel for out-of-hospitalCan repeat once; respiratory depression risk
Midazolam (Versed) IM/INAlternative if no IV; buccal or intranasal routes availableFaster IM absorption than lorazepam; monitor respirations
Levetiracetam (Keppra) IVSecond-line; also chronic maintenanceFewer drug interactions than phenytoin; behavioral side effects (irritability, aggression)
Fosphenytoin / Phenytoin IVSecond-line for status epilepticusFosphenytoin: safer infusion (can give faster); monitor BP and cardiac rhythm during infusion
Valproate (Depakote) IVBroad-spectrum; status epilepticus alternativeHepatotoxic; teratogenic (absolutely avoided in pregnancy); monitor LFTs
Phenobarbital IVThird-line; useful in neonatesLong duration; significant respiratory depression; sedation
Levetiracetam / Lacosamide (oral)Maintenance antiepileptic therapyMonitor adherence; abrupt discontinuation causes breakthrough seizures

Treatment sequence for status epilepticus: Benzodiazepine (1st) → Levetiracetam or fosphenytoin (2nd) → Phenobarbital or anesthetic agents (3rd).

Documentation Requirements

Document a complete seizure record immediately after patient is safe:

  • Onset time — exact time seizure began (critical for status epilepticus determination)
  • Duration — exact time from onset to cessation of activity
  • Type and characteristics — focal vs. generalized; tonic, clonic, or both; body parts involved; eye deviation; automatisms
  • Preceding aura — if reported by patient
  • Ictal behavior — LOC, cyanosis, incontinence, apnea
  • Post-ictal phase — duration, level of confusion, GCS, any focal deficits (Todd's paralysis)
  • Interventions — medications given (drug, dose, time, route, response), O2, positioning
  • Provider notification — time of notification and provider response
  • Vital signs and neurological status — before and after

Patient and Family Education

  • Medication adherence: Never abruptly stop antiepileptic drugs — breakthrough seizures may be severe and prolonged
  • Trigger avoidance: Sleep deprivation, alcohol, stress, and fever are common seizure triggers
  • Driving restrictions: Most states require a seizure-free period (typically 6–12 months) before driving — verify state law
  • Seizure safety at home: Shower instead of bath (drowning risk); avoid heights, heavy machinery, open flames
  • Family education: Teach seizure first aid — side position, protect head, time seizure, call 911 if >5 minutes
  • Medical alert: Encourage wearing a medical ID bracelet
  • VNS and rescue medications: Educate on prescribed devices (vagus nerve stimulator) and rescue medications (rectal diazepam, intranasal midazolam) if prescribed

NCLEX Pearls

  • NEVER put anything in a seizing patient's mouth. The myth of swallowing the tongue is false — tongue blades are harmful and contraindicated.
  • NEVER restrain limbs during active clonic seizure. Provide padding and protect the head instead.
  • Status epilepticus = seizure ≥5 minutes or recurrent seizures without recovery. It is a medical emergency requiring immediate IV benzodiazepine.
  • First-line treatment for active seizure: IV lorazepam (or IM midazolam if no IV access).
  • Todd's paralysis: focal weakness post-seizure that resolves spontaneously — do NOT confuse with stroke. Differentiated by the post-seizure timing.
  • Absence seizures: no aura, no post-ictal period, brief blank stare + eye flutter — patient resumes activity immediately. Most common in children.
  • Antiepileptic drugs are NEVER discontinued abruptly — taper only. Abrupt discontinuation is a major cause of status epilepticus.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with American Heart Association / American Stroke Association (AHA/ASA) · American Association of Neuroscience Nurses (AANN). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →