Febrile Seizures
Guidance for primary care clinicians diagnosing and managing children with febrile seizure
According to the American Academy of Pediatrics, a febrile seizure is a seizure accompanied by fever (temperature ≥ 100.4°F or 38°C2 by any method), without central nervous system infection, that occurs in infants and children 6 through 60 months of age. [Subcommittee: 2011] Typical children have a 2-5% risk of febrile seizures. [Baumann: 2000]
Key Points
Characteristics of a simple febrile seizure [Subcommittee: 2011]
- The seizure occurs in a normally developing child without underlying neurologic problems, evidence of meningitis or encephalitis, or metabolic disturbances.
- The child is 6 months to 5 years of age.
- The fever is present before or with the seizure.
- The seizure is generalized, involving arms and legs.
- There is only 1 seizure in 24 hours.
- The seizure lasts less than 15 minutes.
Complex febrile seizures
Children with complex
febrile seizures have a different prognosis and treatment than those with simple
febrile seizures. If the seizure has any of the following features, it is a complex
febrile seizure:
- Focal features
- Prolonged (greater than 15 minutes)
- Recurs within 24 hours of a first febrile seizure
Practice Guidelines
Subcommittee on febrile seizures.
Neurodiagnostic evaluation of the child with a simple febrile seizure.
Pediatrics.
2011;127(2):389-94.
PubMed abstract
Diagnosis
In the clinical setting of a simple febrile seizure (i.e., a child with the appropriate history and normal exam), brain imaging, blood studies (CBC, electrolytes, calcium, phosphorus, magnesium, glucose), and EEG are not thought to be necessary for children over a year of age.
The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) recommends that a lumbar puncture be strongly considered in children:
- <12 months old
- With any sign of intracranial infection, such as neck stiffness or Kernig and Brudzinski signs
- That might have been pre-treated with antibiotics
The AAP also recommends that a lumbar puncture be considered in children from 12 to 18 months, as meningeal signs might be difficult to appreciate in this age group. [Subcommittee: 2011] The risk for meningitis in a child with a simple febrile seizure is low. [Guedj: 2015]
Prognosis
The recurrence risk for future febrile seizures is 50% for children under 1 year, 30% for children over 1 year, and 50% for children who have experienced 2 febrile seizures (not given by age range).
Simple febrile seizures are generally benign and have a good prognosis; the child is unlikely to have developmental problems or future epilepsy. Treatment does not appear to improve long-term outcomes, and good outcomes are expected.
In more detail, the risk of epilepsy for all children with febrile seizures is 2-5%; this increases to about 10% when the child has 2-3 risk factors. Risk factors include age less than 12 months, multiple febrile seizures, a family history of epilepsy, a prior neurologic insult, or an abnormal baseline neurologic exam. [Mewasingh: 2020] [Lee: 2016]
Treatment
Subcommittee on febrile seizures.
Neurodiagnostic evaluation of the child with a simple febrile seizure.
Pediatrics.
2011;127(2):389-94.
PubMed abstract
Resources
Information & Support
Related Portal Content
Assessment and management information for the primary care
clinician caring for the child with different kinds of seizures:
For Parents and Patients
Febrile Seizures in Children (Bright Futures)Helpful Articles
Smith DK, Sadler KP, Benedum M.
Febrile Seizures: Risks, Evaluation, and Prognosis.
Am Fam Physician.
2019;99(7):445-450.
PubMed abstract
Authors & Reviewers
Author: | Lynne M. Kerr, MD, PhD |
Reviewer: | Cristina Corina Trandafir, MD, PhD |
2019: update: Lynne M. Kerr, MD, PhDA |
2013: first version: Lynne M. Kerr, MD, PhDA |
Page Bibliography
Baumann RJ, Duffner PK.
Treatment of children with simple febrile seizures: the AAP practice parameter. American Academy of Pediatrics.
Pediatr Neurol.
2000;23(1):11-7.
PubMed abstract
Guedj R, Chappuy H, Titomanlio L, Trieu TV, Biscardi S, Nissack-Obiketeki G, Pellegrino B, Charara O, Angoulvant F, Villemeur
TB, Levy C, Cohen R, Armengaud JB, Carbajal R.
Risk of Bacterial Meningitis in Children 6 to 11 Months of Age With a First Simple Febrile Seizure: A Retrospective, Cross-sectional,
Observational Study.
Acad Emerg Med.
2015;22(11):1290-7.
PubMed abstract
Kimia AA, Bachur RG, Torres A, Harper MB.
Febrile seizures: emergency medicine perspective.
Curr Opin Pediatr.
2015;27(3):292-7.
PubMed abstract
Lee SH, Byeon JH, Kim GH, Eun BL, Eun SH.
Epilepsy in children with a history of febrile seizures.
Korean J Pediatr.
2016;59(2):74-9.
PubMed abstract / Full Text
Mewasingh LD, Chin RFM, Scott RC.
Current understanding of febrile seizures and their long-term outcomes.
Dev Med Child Neurol.
2020;62(11):1245-1249.
PubMed abstract
Pavlidou E, Tzitiridou M, Panteliadis C.
Effectiveness of intermittent diazepam prophylaxis in febrile seizures: long-term prospective controlled study.
J Child Neurol.
2006;21(12):1036-40.
PubMed abstract
Smith DK, Sadler KP, Benedum M.
Febrile Seizures: Risks, Evaluation, and Prognosis.
Am Fam Physician.
2019;99(7):445-450.
PubMed abstract
Subcommittee on febrile seizures.
Neurodiagnostic evaluation of the child with a simple febrile seizure.
Pediatrics.
2011;127(2):389-94.
PubMed abstract