Seizures, Febrile
BASICS
- Definition: Seizures in children aged 6 months–6 years with fever ≥100.4°F (38°C), without underlying neurologic/metabolic disease or CNS infection.
- Types:
- Simple Febrile Seizure (SFS): (70–75%)
- Generalized tonic/clonic, <15 min, nonrecurring in 24 hrs, resolves spontaneously, no previous afebrile seizures or neuro problems.
- Complex Febrile Seizure (CFS): (20–25%)
- Focal, >15 min but <30 min, recurs in 24 hrs, or with postictal focal deficits.
- Febrile Status Epilepticus (FSE): (5%)
EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Incidence: ~500,000 FS/year in US.
- Prevalence: 3–5% of children 6 months–6 years; peak at 18 months, 90% before age 3.
- Seasonality: Mirrors peaks of febrile respiratory/GI illness (Nov–Jan; June–Aug).
ETIOLOGY & PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
- Pathophysiology: Unclear; age-dependent vulnerability, fever triggers increased neuronal excitability (cytokines, temp-sensitive ion channels).
- Genetics: ↑ risk with family history of FS (esp. monozygotic twins); some genes overlap with epilepsy syndromes.
RISK FACTORS
- Fever characteristics: Height (more than rate of rise)
- Viral infection: 80% due to virus (HHV-6, influenza A, adenovirus, parainfluenza)
- Recent vaccination: MMR, DTwP, PCV13, coadministration increases risk
- Family history: FS in first/second degree relatives (25–40%)
- Others: Male sex, NICU >28d, developmental delay, daycare, prenatal nicotine, iron deficiency, low zinc
GENERAL PREVENTION
- Use vaccines with lower FS risk if available; consider spacing out MMR and varicella; use DTaP (acellular) over DTwP.
- Prophylactic antipyretics not recommended before vaccines.
COMMONLY ASSOCIATED CONDITIONS
- Viral: HHV-6, influenza, parainfluenza, adenovirus, RSV
- Bacterial: Otitis media, pharyngitis, UTI, pneumonia, Shigella gastroenteritis
- Vaccines: ↑ risk with MMRV, DTwP, coadministration of flu + PCV13 or DTaP.
DIAGNOSIS
HISTORY
- Key features: Fever, generalized tonic-clonic (SFS), focal/prolonged/recurrent (CFS), postictal state, underlying infection symptoms.
- Risk factors: Vaccine history, family/personal hx, previous neurodevelopment.
- Red flags: Prolonged postictal confusion, persistent neuro deficits, or focal findings.
PHYSICAL EXAM
- Monitor vitals and neurologic status.
- Look for meningeal signs, petechial rash, trauma.
- Postictal drowsiness resolves <10 min; longer or focal findings → evaluate for meningitis/CNS infection.
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- CNS infection (meningitis, encephalitis)
- Primary epilepsy
- Trauma, mass, metabolic disorder, hypoglycemia
- Seizure mimics: rigors, breath-holding, dystonia, syncope
DIAGNOSTIC TESTS & INTERPRETATION
- Routine labs: Not required if child appears well.
- Blood/urine: Only if other symptoms or high UTI risk.
- Lumbar puncture: If meningeal signs, 6–12 months with incomplete Hib/Strep pneumo vaccination, or prior antibiotics.
- Neuroimaging: Not routinely recommended; indicated for prolonged/focal or concerning presentation.
- EEG/MRI: Only for complex cases, especially with focality or recurrent/prolonged seizures.
TREATMENT
GENERAL MEASURES
- Acute management: Monitor airway, breathing, circulation (ABCs); lateral position; suction secretions; O₂ as needed.
- Most FS self-limited.
- Abortive therapy for ≥5 min seizure:
- Pre-hospital: Rectal diazepam (0.5 mg/kg), buccal/nasal midazolam (0.2–0.4 mg/kg)
- Hospital: IV/IM lorazepam (0.05–0.1 mg/kg), IV diazepam (0.1–0.2 mg/kg)
- If persistent: IV fosphenytoin (20 mg PE/kg); consider additional dose if needed.
- Second line: IV phenobarbital, valproic acid, or levetiracetam if seizure continues
- Antipyretics: For comfort only, may reduce recurrence during same fever episode but not for prophylaxis.
ONGOING CARE
- Anticonvulsant prophylaxis not recommended during future febrile episodes (AEs outweigh benefits).
- Parental reassurance: Benign nature, excellent prognosis, low risk of sequelae or death.
- Education: Benefits of vaccination outweigh risk; risk depends more on history than vaccine itself.
PROGNOSIS
- Favorable for children with normal neurodevelopment.
- Recurrence: 1/3 have second FS; 15% have third.
- Risk of epilepsy after FS: 1% for SFS, 4–6% for CFS.
- Risk factors for recurrence: Younger onset, lower temp at onset, short fever-to-seizure interval, family hx, CFS features.
- Risk factors for epilepsy: Onset >3 yrs, CFS, developmental delay, abnormal neuro exam, family hx epilepsy.
COMPLICATIONS
- Very rare with appropriate evaluation
- Risk of epilepsy or other neurologic sequelae is low
ICD-10
- R56.00: Simple febrile convulsions
- R56.01: Complex febrile convulsions
- G40.901: Epilepsy, unspecified, not intractable, with status epilepticus
CLINICAL PEARLS
- Febrile seizures are generally benign and without sequelae if underlying causes are excluded.
- Labs, lumbar puncture, neuroimaging, and EEG are not routinely needed unless indicated.
- Prophylaxis with anticonvulsants or antipyretics during subsequent febrile episodes is not recommended.