Febrile seizure

Revision as of 02:38, 9 August 2012 by WikiBot (talk | contribs) (Bot: Automated text replacement (-{{SIB}} + & -{{EJ}} + & -{{EH}} + & -{{Editor Join}} + & -{{Editor Help}} +))
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Febrile seizure
ICD-10 R56.0
ICD-9 780.3

WikiDoc Resources for Febrile seizure

Articles

Most recent articles on Febrile seizure

Most cited articles on Febrile seizure

Review articles on Febrile seizure

Articles on Febrile seizure in N Eng J Med, Lancet, BMJ

Media

Powerpoint slides on Febrile seizure

Images of Febrile seizure

Photos of Febrile seizure

Podcasts & MP3s on Febrile seizure

Videos on Febrile seizure

Evidence Based Medicine

Cochrane Collaboration on Febrile seizure

Bandolier on Febrile seizure

TRIP on Febrile seizure

Clinical Trials

Ongoing Trials on Febrile seizure at Clinical Trials.gov

Trial results on Febrile seizure

Clinical Trials on Febrile seizure at Google

Guidelines / Policies / Govt

US National Guidelines Clearinghouse on Febrile seizure

NICE Guidance on Febrile seizure

NHS PRODIGY Guidance

FDA on Febrile seizure

CDC on Febrile seizure

Books

Books on Febrile seizure

News

Febrile seizure in the news

Be alerted to news on Febrile seizure

News trends on Febrile seizure

Commentary

Blogs on Febrile seizure

Definitions

Definitions of Febrile seizure

Patient Resources / Community

Patient resources on Febrile seizure

Discussion groups on Febrile seizure

Patient Handouts on Febrile seizure

Directions to Hospitals Treating Febrile seizure

Risk calculators and risk factors for Febrile seizure

Healthcare Provider Resources

Symptoms of Febrile seizure

Causes & Risk Factors for Febrile seizure

Diagnostic studies for Febrile seizure

Treatment of Febrile seizure

Continuing Medical Education (CME)

CME Programs on Febrile seizure

International

Febrile seizure en Espanol

Febrile seizure en Francais

Business

Febrile seizure in the Marketplace

Patents on Febrile seizure

Experimental / Informatics

List of terms related to Febrile seizure

Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]


Overview

A febrile seizure, also known as a fever fit or febrile convulsion is a generalized convulsion caused by elevated body temperature. They most commonly occur in children below the age of three and should not be diagnosed in children under the age of 6 months or over the age of 6 years. In many cases, the first sign of fever is the onset of the seizure. It has been theorized that the seizure is triggered by the rapidity of the rise in temperature, rather than the actual temperature reached.

Classification

Simple

  • Seizure less than 15 minutes
  • Generalized
  • Does not reoccur in same febrile illness

Complex

  • Focal features
  • Prolonged past 15 minutes
  • Reoccurs with 24 hours

Febrile seizures represent the meeting point between a low seizure threshold (genetically and age determined) - some children have a greater tendency to have a seizure under certain circumstances - and a trigger: fever. The genetic causes of febrile seizures are still being researched. Some mutations that cause a neuronal hyperexcitability and could be responsible for febrile seizures have already been discovered.

Diagnosis

The diagnosis is one that must be arrived at by eliminating more serious causes of seizure: in particular, meningitis and encephalitis must be ruled out. Therefore a doctor's opinion should be sought and in many cases the child would be admitted to hospital overnight for observation and/or tests. As a general rule, if the child returns to a normal state of health soon after the seizure, a nervous system infection is unlikely. Even in cases where the diagnosis is febrile seizure, doctors will try to identify and treat the source of fever. In particular, it is useful to distinguish the event as a simple febrile seizure - in which the seizure lasts less than 15 minutes, does not recur in the next 24 hours, and involves the entire body (classically a generalized tonic-clonic seizure). The complex febrile seizure is characterized by long duration, recurrence, or focus on only part of the body. The simple seizure represents the majority of cases and is considered to be less of a cause for concern than the complex. It is reassuring if the cause of seizure can indeed be determined to have been fever, as simple febrile seizures generally do not cause permanent brain injury; do not tend to recur frequently, as children tend to 'out-grow' them; and do not make the development of adult epilepsy significantly more likely (less than 3-5% which is similar to that of the general public).

Children with febrile convulsions who are destined to suffer from afebrile epileptic attacks in the future will usually exhibit the following:

Management

Early use of antipyretics for fever seems useful and effective. Applying cold (tepid sponging) is no longer recommended, as it does not appear to offer any advantage over antipyretic medications. The commonly given advice to give anti-pyretic drugs to reduce fever in the hope of reducing the risk of febrile convulsion following childhood immunization lacks good evidence of effectiveness.[1]

For children who present with a prolonged seizure, rectal diazepam may be used at home in the event of another prolonged (e.g. more than 5 minutes) seizure is an option. Some children have frequent episodes, and although it is tempting to prescribe anti-epileptic medication to prevent stress and inconvenience, it is hard to justify the risk:benefit ratio.

Prognosis

Following a first febrile convulsion, 2-4% of children will have an unprovoked (i.e. afebrile) seizure - this is 4 x the risk in general population). Most of these children will subsequently develop epilepsy. Other risk factors for developing epilepsy:

  • Family history of epilepsy
  • Complex features
  • Presence of early onset neuro-developmental abnormalities

Genetic basis but multiple chromosomes, so complex and not strictly autosomal dominant. Current opinion supports an association between prolonged febrile convulsion and lesions in the temporal lobe (especially hippocampal sclerosis; in the past it was thought febrile convulsions might predispose to temporal lobe epilepsy, but the brain lesions probably pre-exists and increases the likelihood of febrile convulsion.

Prognosis is generally good. One third of children presenting with a febrile convulsion will have another one (recurrence); age would appear to be the single, strongest, and most consistent risk factor: the younger you are when you have your first, the more likely you are to have another before you grow out of it! Most recurrences will occur during the first year after the initial episode and over 90% recur within two years. Other risks - family history of febrile seizures (but not epilepsy) in a first degree relative, children whose initial seizure occurred with a relatively low fever, multiple initial seizures occurring during the same febrile episode. Surprisingly, status epilepticus in an otherwise normal child does not appear to significantly increase the risk for further febrile seizures or the development of epilepsy.

See also

References

  1. Hay, A. D., Redmond, N. and Fletcher, M. Editorial: Antipyretic drugs for children. British Medical Journal, Vol. 333, July 1, 2006, pp. 4-5

Additional Resource

  1. Wilkinson, I.M.S. Neurology. Blackwell Science. ISBN 0-86542-854-9

Template:Skin and subcutaneous tissue symptoms and signs Template:Nervous and musculoskeletal system symptoms and signs Template:Urinary system symptoms and signs Template:Cognition, perception, emotional state and behaviour symptoms and signs Template:Speech and voice symptoms and signs Template:General symptoms and signs

de:Fieberkrampf nl:Koortsstuip sl:Vročinski krči

Template:WH Template:WikiDoc Sources