Seizures/ epilepsy
Adult

Neurology

Useful Management Information

  • Ensure compliance, consider drug levels if non-compliance is suspected
  • Optimise current drug therapy/consider increasing dose if already on medication
  • Exclude drug interactions e.g. concurrent cytochrome inducers, binding agents
  • Reconsider diagnosis if no response to medication
  • Treat any inter-current infections and co-morbidities
  • Address any lifestyle issues e.g. adequate sleep, stress, alcohol, recreational drugs
  • Clinical urgency is the dominant consideration in the prioritisation of a referral for a child currently in out of home care (OOHC), or at risk of entering or leaving OOHC.

Clinician Resources

Minimum Referral Criteria

Does your patient meet the minimum referral criteria?
Category 1 (appointment within 30 calendar days)
  • New diagnosis of epilepsy (confirmed or highly likely)
  • First epileptic seizure (as convulsive syncope is a common mimic, may be seen by general medicine prior to neurology, depending on local pathways)
  • Frequent seizure activity with current anticonvulsants use
  • High seizure frequency without antiepileptic therapy
  • Pregnancy in a patient with known epilepsy
Category 2 (appointment within 90 calendar days)
  • Poorly controlled epilepsy (e.g. increased frequency of seizures, change in seizure activity) in patient with good adherence to medical treatment. (This may be categorised as Cat 1 depending on severity)
  • Suspected non-epileptic attacks*

*Suspected non-epileptic seizures should be triaged according to the social and medical impact of their epileptic-seizure counterparts rather than based on the (suspected) cause

Category 3 (appointment within 365 calendar days)
  • Chronic epilepsy without any concerning features. Concerning features include:
    • focal deficit post-ictally
    • seizure associated with recent trauma
    • persistent severe headache > 1 hour post-ictally
    • seizure with fever
  • Epilepsy advice and management plan including driving recommendations and decreasing anti-epileptic medication
  • If the patient does not meet the criteria for referral but the referring practitioner believes the patient requires specialist review, a clinical override may be requested:
    • Please explain why (e.g. warning signs or symptoms, clinical modifiers, uncertain about diagnosis, etc.)
  • Please note that your referral may not be accepted or may be redirected to another service.

Essential Referral Information

  • ELFT
  • FBC
  • History of seizures
  • Medication history, including non-prescription medications, herbs and supplements
  • Management history of epilepsy (including previous medication, dosage, efficacy, side effects)

Additional Referral Information

  • EEG results
  • Neuroimaging results
  • Drug level results (if available)
  • Family history
  • Drug and alcohol history
  • Sleep studies (if available)
  • HIV syphilis (if available)
Last updated 19 December 2022

Send Referrals To

Smart Referrals

Preferred Method
About Smart Referrals

Secure Web Transfer

Send to: Gold Coast Health Service District

Internal Referrals

Neurology (E-Blueslips)

Fax

(07) 5687 4497

Post

Booking and Referral Centre
Gold Coast University Hospital
1 Hospital Boulevard
Southport QLD 4215

Enquiries

1300 559 083

Related HealthPathways

No directly related pathways found

Service Availability

Dr Saman Heshmat
Medical Director Neurology

Facilities

Gold Coast University Hospital

If you would like to send a named referral, please address it to the specialist listed above, who will allocate a suitably qualified specialist to see the patient. Alternatively, you can view a full list of our specialists.

Gold Coast Health - For Clinicians
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