Febrile convulsion Flashcards

1
Q

Most common age

A

6 months to 5 years

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2
Q

Kind of seizure

A

short-lived and tonic-clonic in nature

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3
Q

Prognosis
- 1 in 3 children will have at least one more febrile convulsion
- Simple febrile convulsions
[…] affect development
- […] hugely increase the child’s likelihood of developing epilepsy (by […]%)

Complex febrile convulsions last for a […] time and/or occur […] times in the […] febrile illness –> associated with a […] increased risk of epilepsy, around 4-12%.

A

don’t
don’t, 1
long, multiple, same, significantly

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4
Q

Acute management of febrile seizures

Find source of fever –> underlying cause requires any treatment.

  • Parents should be advised on:
  • Appropriate anti-pyretic usage
  • […] give anti-pyretics ‘prophylactically’ –> no evidence that they will […] incidence of FCs
  • To avoid sponging a child to cool them down
  • Appropriate safety net advice should another seizure occur –> […][…]
A

Don’t, reduce
status epilleticus

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5
Q

“Should I give my child paracetamol?”

A

It will not reduce risk of FCs, however if they seem miserable with their temperature then paracetamol might help with symptoms

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