Febrile Seizures: Evidence for Evolution of an Operational Strategy from an Armed Forces Referral Hospital

Sunil Jain,1 Abhijith Santhosh2 1Department of Paediatrics, Command Hospital (Northern Command), Jammu & Kashmir, India; 2Medical Officer, Emergency Department, Command Hospital (Northern Command), Jammu & Kashmir, IndiaCorrespondence: Sunil JainProfessor & Head, Department o...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jain S, Santhosh A
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2021-03-01
Series:Pediatric Health, Medicine and Therapeutics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.dovepress.com/febrile-seizures-evidence-for-evolution-of-an-operational-strategy-fro-peer-reviewed-article-PHMT
id doaj-2603f36b645d4f909d59601fb380f858
record_format Article
spelling doaj-2603f36b645d4f909d59601fb380f8582021-03-28T19:57:50ZengDove Medical PressPediatric Health, Medicine and Therapeutics1179-99272021-03-01Volume 1215115963398Febrile Seizures: Evidence for Evolution of an Operational Strategy from an Armed Forces Referral HospitalJain SSanthosh ASunil Jain,1 Abhijith Santhosh2 1Department of Paediatrics, Command Hospital (Northern Command), Jammu & Kashmir, India; 2Medical Officer, Emergency Department, Command Hospital (Northern Command), Jammu & Kashmir, IndiaCorrespondence: Sunil JainProfessor & Head, Department of Paediatrics, Command Hospital (Northern Command), c/o 56 APO, 901131, IndiaTel +91 9086068677Email sunil_jain700@rediff.comPurpose: Current recommendations for ‘Febrile seizures’ management include emergency first aid and treatment along with intermittent prophylaxis. Evidence of practices, efficacy, side-effects, and complications should lead to refined and rational management strategies.Patients and Methods: Study of cases referred and treated at a tertiary level hospital, providing referral services to a large state in India. Evidence sought for the research questions identified, these were (i) immediate treatment: First aid components and practices; response to drug treatment (ii) intermittent prophylaxis: effectiveness, compliance, and side-effects (iii) complications arising due to treatment side-effects: quantifying the number of cases of CNS infections missed as a result of alterations in consciousness levels due to benzodiazepines.Results: A total of 85 febrile seizure cases were studied. Full correct “First Aid” was provided by only 13 parents. Total 35 cases (41.18%) had seizures lasting more than 05 minutes. Emergency treatment for these included rectal diazepam in 14 cases with 57.14% success in terminating seizure, and intranasal midazolam in 21 cases with 71.43% success. The cases with persisting seizures were managed as status epilepticus treatment algorithm. Intermittent prophylaxis prevented recurrence of seizures in 90%, however side-effects were reported in 36.36%. There was no case of CNS infection missed.Conclusion: Safe and effective management strategy should include “Health education” for correct first aid and ‘Protocols’ for timely and correct emergency treatment by parents/pre-hospital teams/emergency duty doctors. Intermittent prophylaxis is effective but refinements needed to minimize side-effects. Vigilant clinical monitoring obviates the fear that treatment may mask CNS infection.Keywords: first aid, emergency treatment, prophylaxis, benzodiazepines, meningitis, monitoringhttps://www.dovepress.com/febrile-seizures-evidence-for-evolution-of-an-operational-strategy-fro-peer-reviewed-article-PHMTfirst aidemergency treatmentprophylaxisbenzodiazepinesmeningitismonitoring
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jain S
Santhosh A
spellingShingle Jain S
Santhosh A
Febrile Seizures: Evidence for Evolution of an Operational Strategy from an Armed Forces Referral Hospital
Pediatric Health, Medicine and Therapeutics
first aid
emergency treatment
prophylaxis
benzodiazepines
meningitis
monitoring
author_facet Jain S
Santhosh A
author_sort Jain S
title Febrile Seizures: Evidence for Evolution of an Operational Strategy from an Armed Forces Referral Hospital
title_short Febrile Seizures: Evidence for Evolution of an Operational Strategy from an Armed Forces Referral Hospital
title_full Febrile Seizures: Evidence for Evolution of an Operational Strategy from an Armed Forces Referral Hospital
title_fullStr Febrile Seizures: Evidence for Evolution of an Operational Strategy from an Armed Forces Referral Hospital
title_full_unstemmed Febrile Seizures: Evidence for Evolution of an Operational Strategy from an Armed Forces Referral Hospital
title_sort febrile seizures: evidence for evolution of an operational strategy from an armed forces referral hospital
publisher Dove Medical Press
series Pediatric Health, Medicine and Therapeutics
issn 1179-9927
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Sunil Jain,1 Abhijith Santhosh2 1Department of Paediatrics, Command Hospital (Northern Command), Jammu & Kashmir, India; 2Medical Officer, Emergency Department, Command Hospital (Northern Command), Jammu & Kashmir, IndiaCorrespondence: Sunil JainProfessor & Head, Department of Paediatrics, Command Hospital (Northern Command), c/o 56 APO, 901131, IndiaTel +91 9086068677Email sunil_jain700@rediff.comPurpose: Current recommendations for ‘Febrile seizures’ management include emergency first aid and treatment along with intermittent prophylaxis. Evidence of practices, efficacy, side-effects, and complications should lead to refined and rational management strategies.Patients and Methods: Study of cases referred and treated at a tertiary level hospital, providing referral services to a large state in India. Evidence sought for the research questions identified, these were (i) immediate treatment: First aid components and practices; response to drug treatment (ii) intermittent prophylaxis: effectiveness, compliance, and side-effects (iii) complications arising due to treatment side-effects: quantifying the number of cases of CNS infections missed as a result of alterations in consciousness levels due to benzodiazepines.Results: A total of 85 febrile seizure cases were studied. Full correct “First Aid” was provided by only 13 parents. Total 35 cases (41.18%) had seizures lasting more than 05 minutes. Emergency treatment for these included rectal diazepam in 14 cases with 57.14% success in terminating seizure, and intranasal midazolam in 21 cases with 71.43% success. The cases with persisting seizures were managed as status epilepticus treatment algorithm. Intermittent prophylaxis prevented recurrence of seizures in 90%, however side-effects were reported in 36.36%. There was no case of CNS infection missed.Conclusion: Safe and effective management strategy should include “Health education” for correct first aid and ‘Protocols’ for timely and correct emergency treatment by parents/pre-hospital teams/emergency duty doctors. Intermittent prophylaxis is effective but refinements needed to minimize side-effects. Vigilant clinical monitoring obviates the fear that treatment may mask CNS infection.Keywords: first aid, emergency treatment, prophylaxis, benzodiazepines, meningitis, monitoring
topic first aid
emergency treatment
prophylaxis
benzodiazepines
meningitis
monitoring
url https://www.dovepress.com/febrile-seizures-evidence-for-evolution-of-an-operational-strategy-fro-peer-reviewed-article-PHMT
work_keys_str_mv AT jains febrileseizuresevidenceforevolutionofanoperationalstrategyfromanarmedforcesreferralhospital
AT santhosha febrileseizuresevidenceforevolutionofanoperationalstrategyfromanarmedforcesreferralhospital
_version_ 1724199474506498048