Pediatrics

⚡ Febrile Seizures and Status Epilepticus in Children

A Comprehensive Article

Pediatric Emergencies

Seizures during fever are among the scariest experiences for parents, but for clinicians, they’re often benign and self-limited — unless they cross into status epilepticus, where every second counts. Let’s explore both carefully.

🌡️ Febrile Seizures

🧩 Definition

A febrile seizure is a seizure associated with fever ≥38°C, occurring in a neurologically healthy child aged 6 months–5 years, without evidence of CNS infection, metabolic abnormality, or prior afebrile seizures. These account for about 2–5% of all children — peaking around 18 months.

🔍 Classification

Type Duration Focality Recurrence within 24 h Postictal deficit
Simple < 15 min Generalized No None
Complex ≥ 15 min Focal or multifocal Yes May have Todd’s paresis

💡 Think: Simple = Short, Single, Symmetrical

🧠 Pathophysiology

  • Immature brain: lower seizure threshold.
  • Rapid rise in body temperature triggers abnormal neuronal firing.
  • Genetic predisposition: first-degree relatives often have similar histories.
  • Cytokine surge (IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α) during fever can alter neuronal excitability.

🧬 Risk Factors

  • Family history of febrile seizures or epilepsy
  • High fever (>39°C) or rapid temperature spike
  • Viral infections (HHV-6, influenza, adenovirus)
  • Post-immunization fever (MMR, DTP)
  • Iron deficiency anemia

🩺 Clinical Presentation

  • Often occurs early in a febrile illness.
  • Sudden loss of consciousness → generalized tonic-clonic movements.
  • Eyes roll upward, limbs stiffen, may froth at the mouth.
  • Duration: usually <5 min.
  • Followed by brief postictal sleepiness or confusion, but rapid recovery.

🧾 Evaluation

💊 Management

💊 Immediate (During the Seizure)

  1. Ensure safety: clear surrounding objects.
  2. Position: place child on their side, head slightly down (recovery position).
  3. Airway: maintain patency, suction secretions if needed.
  4. Do NOT: insert objects into mouth or restrain.
  5. Time the seizure.

If seizure lasts > 5 min:

  • IV diazepam 0.3 mg/kg (max 10 mg)
  • OR Rectal diazepam 0.5 mg/kg
  • OR Buccal/nasal midazolam 0.2 mg/kg

💊 Post-Seizure Care

  • Control fever: paracetamol 15 mg/kg + tepid sponging.
  • Identify and treat infection (malaria, otitis, pneumonia).
  • Observe until full recovery.
  • Reassure parents — the episode looks frightening but is usually harmless.

🧩 Parent Counseling

🧩 Guidance for Families

  • Simple febrile seizures do not cause brain damage or developmental delay.
  • Recurrence risk: 30–40% (especially if <18 months, family history, or low fever threshold).
  • Epilepsy risk: 2–4% (slightly higher than general population).
  • Teach parents: How to position the child safely; When to seek help (seizure >5 min, focal, recurrent); Use of rectal diazepam for home rescue if prescribed.

💥 Status Epilepticus (SE)

💥 When Seizures Don't Stop

Continuous seizure activity for ≥ 5 minutes, or ≥ 2 seizures without full recovery in between. After 30 minutes, neuronal injury begins — hence early termination saves neurons.

Causes

  • Poorly controlled epilepsy
  • Febrile or CNS infections (meningitis, encephalitis)
  • Hypoxia, hypoglycemia, electrolyte imbalance
  • Head trauma
  • Toxin ingestion or medication non-compliance

🚑 Management: Stepwise Approach

Step Action Drug & Dose Key Notes
1. Stabilize (0–5 min) Airway, Breathing, Circulation O₂, suction, check glucose Correct hypoglycemia with 10% dextrose (2 mL/kg)
2. First-line (5–10 min) Benzodiazepine Diazepam 0.3 mg/kg IV or 0.5 mg/kg rectal / Midazolam 0.2 mg/kg buccal May repeat once after 5 min
3. Second-line (10–20 min) Anticonvulsant Phenobarbital 20 mg/kg IV (5 mg/kg/min) OR Phenytoin 20 mg/kg IV (1 mg/kg/min) Monitor ECG, BP, respiratory rate
4. Refractory (20–30 min) Continuous infusion Midazolam infusion 0.1 mg/kg/h OR Thiopental infusion Requires ICU, possible intubation

🔹 Always correct hypoxia, hypoglycemia, and electrolyte abnormalities first. 🔹 Continuous monitoring — oxygen saturation, BP, temperature, and urine output.

🧩 Complications

  • Hypoxic brain injury
  • Rhabdomyolysis → renal failure
  • Hyperthermia
  • Aspiration pneumonia
  • Death (if not managed promptly)

🧠 Comparison Snapshot

Feature Febrile Seizure Status Epilepticus
Trigger Fever Various (fever, epilepsy, infection, metabolic)
Duration < 15 min (simple) > 5 min continuous
Consciousness Regains quickly Persistent loss
Treatment Usually supportive Emergency drugs, ICU if needed
Outcome Benign Life-threatening

💭 Key Takeaways

  • Simple febrile seizures are benign and self-limiting — reassure parents.
  • Complex or recurrent seizures warrant investigation.
  • Status epilepticus = Neurological emergency. Time is brain.
  • Early airway support, prompt benzodiazepine use, and escalation save lives.