Febrile Seizure Flashcards

1
Q

When should you LP a child with febrile seizure?

A
  • Age < 1 (regardless of semiology and exam)
  • Meets criteria for complex febrile seizure
  • Age > 5 (regardless of semiology and exam)
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2
Q

Past what point is nuchal rigidity a reliable sign for meingitis?

A

18 months of age

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3
Q

Febrile seizure

A

Generalized seizure associated with a fever, usually exceeding 101 F, typically occuring in a child between 6 months and 5 years of age.

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4
Q

Simple febrile seizure criteria

A
  1. Patient is otherwise neurologically healthy
  2. Patient’s age is between 3 months and 6 years
  3. Seizure is generalized and without focal elements
  4. Seizure lasts less than 15 minutes
  5. Seizure is associated with a fever (>101 F) that is NOT caused by a CNS infection
  6. Seizure occurs only once in a 24 hour period
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5
Q

Complex febrile seizure criteria

A
  • Lasts > 15 minutes
  • Multiple seizure in less than 24 hours
  • Focalizing signs in seizure semiology
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6
Q

Symptomatic febrile seizure

A

Meeting all criteria for a febrile seizure, but having pre-existing neurologic abnormality or acute illness

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7
Q

Febrile seizures tend to occur in what time window?

A

The first 24 hours of a febrile illness

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8
Q

Infectious agents more commonly associated with febrile seizures

A
  • HHV6 (most common)
  • Adenoviridae
  • Parainfluenza
  • RSV
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9
Q

Generalized epilepsy with febrile seizures plus (GEFS+) syndromes

A
  • Heritable GEFS with highly variable phenotype
  • May persist beyeond age 5
  • Associated with mutations in voltage-gated sodium channels and GABA receptors
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10
Q

Risk for developing epilepsy given a history of febrile seizures as a child

A

Only ~3%

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11
Q

Treatment of febrile status epilepticus

A

Defined as lasting > 30 minutes (as opposed to >5 minutes otherwise) for febrile seizures. Two components:

Treat the fever (cooling methods, antipyretics)

Treat the status epilepticus (as per normal protocol)

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12
Q

If a patient has consistently recurrent febrile seizures, you can. . .

A

. . . prophylax WHEN THEY ARE FEBRILE OR BECOMING FEBRILE with antipyretics and anticonvulsants

Note that the antipyretics here interestingly does not seem to reduce the risk of seizures.

However, treating with rectal or oral diazepam during a fever does reduce the risk and can abort seizures that have already begun.

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