Febrile Seizures: Supervised By: Dr. Pulung M. Silalahi, Sp.A
Febrile Seizures: Supervised By: Dr. Pulung M. Silalahi, Sp.A
Febrile Seizures: Supervised By: Dr. Pulung M. Silalahi, Sp.A
Supervised by:
dr. Pulung M. Silalahi, Sp.A
Created by:
Melani Oktavia
1102015131
Having a seizure when the child’s body temperature is high (38°C or above)
That are not the result of central nervous system infection or any metabolic
imbalance.
Characterictics:
– Tonic clonic seizure
– Does not last >15 minutes
– Does not reoccur within 24 hours or during the period in
which the child has an illness.
Complex febrile seizure
Less common than simple febrile seizures (~10% of cases)
- Body stiffness
- Limbs twitching
- Unconsciousness
- Urine incontinence
- Vomiting
- Foaming at the mouth
- Sleepiness/drowsiness after seizure 1 hour
Diagnosis
01 Anamnesis
02 Physical Examination
03 Laboratory exam
Physical Examination
- Awareness
- Body temperature
- Meningeal excitatory sign
- Signs of Increased intracranial pressure
- Signs of infection outside the central nervous system
- Neurological examination
Laboratory examination
– If the child presents with the first simple febrile seizure and
is neurologically healthy, an EEG is not normally be
performed as part of the evaluation.
– An EEG would not predict the future recurrency of febrile
seizures
– EEG is performed in complex seizure to seek other risk
factors for later epilepsy
Neuroimaging
- Metabolic imbalance.
Treatment
Therapy
Antipyretics
- Paracetamol 10-15 mg / kg, 4x / day
- Ibuprofen 5-10 mg / kg, 3-4x / day
Anticonvulsants
- Diazepam 0.3 mg / kg po or 0.5 mg / kg pr
when fever> 38.50C
Maintenance medicine
- Valproate acid 15-40 mg / kg / day, 2 -3 Dose
- Phenobarbital 3-4mg/kg/day
- In most cases, most KDK in infants <12 months, are given up to 1 year free
from seizures
Further Management
Thank you.