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    BMJ. 1991 Nov 30;303(6814):1373-6.

    Risk of epilepsy after febrile convulsions: a national cohort study.

    Source

    Department of Paediatrics, Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge.

    Erratum in

    • BMJ 1992 Jan 18;304(6820):147.

    Abstract

    OBJECTIVE:

    To identify children with febrile convulsions, classify their febrile convulsions into simple and complex, and determine the number and type of subsequent afebrile seizures in those children.

    DESIGN:

    National population based study.

    SETTING:

    United Kingdom.

    SUBJECTS:

    16,004 neonatal survivors born during one week in April 1970.

    MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES:

    Information about febrile and afebrile seizures obtained from questionnaires at 5 and 10 years of age and from hospital records.

    RESULTS:

    Information was available for 14,676 of the cohort children. 398 (2.7%) of them had had at least one febrile convulsion. 16 children were known to be neurologically or developmentally abnormal before the first attack. Of the remaining 382 children, 305 had had a simple first febrile convulsion and 77 a complex first febrile convulsion. Thirteen of the 382 had had one or more afebrile seizures, nine of whom had developed epilepsy (recurrent afebrile seizures). A higher proportion of children with complex febrile convulsions (6/95) rather than simple febrile convulsions (3/287) developed epilepsy, the risk being highest for those who had had focal febrile convulsions (5/17; chi 2 = 39.9, p less than 0.001). Three of the 32 children who had prolonged febrile convulsions developed afebrile complex partial seizures.

    CONCLUSIONS:

    The risk of epilepsy after febrile convulsions is much less than reported in many hospital studies, and if febrile convulsions cause brain damage that leads to later epilepsy this is a rare occurrence.

    PMID:
    1760604
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
    PMCID:
    PMC1671614
    Free PMC Article

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