Febrile convulsion Flashcards

1
Q

Counselling for parents for what to do during a convulsion?

A
  • The most important thing is to stay calm - don’t panic.
  • Place your child on a soft surface, lying on his or her side or back.
  • Do not restrain your child.
  • Do not put anything in their mouth, including your fingers. Your child will not choke or swallow their tongue.
  • Try to watch exactly what happens, so that you can describe it to the doctor later.
  • Time how long the convulsion lasts.
  • Do not put a child who is having a convulsion in the bath.

Call the ambulance

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2
Q

Typical age for febrile convulsion?

A

6 months to 6 years of age

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3
Q

What is a simple febrile convulsion?

A

These are generalised, tonic-clonic seizures lasting less than 15 minutes that do not recur within the same febrile illness

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4
Q

What is a copmlex febrile convulsion?

A

These have one or more of the following:

  • focal features at onset or during the seizure
  • Duration of more than 15 minutes
  • Recurrence within the same febrile illness
  • Incomplete recovery within 1 hour.
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5
Q

What is febrile status epilepticus?

A

This is a febrile convulsion lasting for longer than 30 minutes

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6
Q

Does paracetamol help reduce the risk of having a febrile convulsion?

A

Paracetamol has NOT been shown to reduce the risk of further febrile convulsions.
It may be used for pain / discomfort associated with febrile illnesses such as otitis media. The parents should understand the reasons for its use and be discouraged from using it solely to reduce their child’s fever.

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7
Q

What is the recurrence rate?

A

depends on the age of the child; the younger the child at the time of the initial convulsion, the greater the risk a further febrile convulsion

1 year old 50%; 2 years old 30%

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8
Q

What is the risk that the child will develop epilepsy?

A

Risk of future afebrile convulsions (epilepsy) is increased by family history of epilepsy, any neurodevelopmental problem, atypical febrile convulsions (prolonged or focal).

  • No risk factors: risk of subsequent epilepsy approx. 1% (similar to population risk).
  • 1 risk factor: 2%.
  • More than 1 risk factor: 10%.
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