# Beyond the seizure: the role of post-event observation in febrile seizure management

**Authors:** Gidon Test, Ana Luiza Zigman, Doron Pasternak, Dennis Scolnik, Vered Wiesel, Yousef Abu El Hasan, Remah Yousef, Oren Tavor, Inbal Kestenbom, Or Kaplan

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s00431-025-06659-8 · European Journal of Pediatrics · 2025-11-25

## TL;DR

This study finds that most children with simple febrile seizures do not need long observation periods in the hospital due to low recurrence rates.

## Contribution

The study identifies that seizure recurrence is rare and occurs within 3 hours, suggesting early discharge may be safe.

## Key findings

- Seizure recurrence occurred in 1.9% of patients, all within 3 hours of the initial seizure.
- No clinical or demographic factors predicted seizure recurrence.
- Early discharge may be considered for stable children after a simple febrile seizure.

## Abstract

Simple febrile seizures (SFS) are a common cause of pediatric emergency department (PED) visits. Guidelines discourage extensive workup for children presenting with SFS, but there is little consensus on whether, or how long, to observe these patients. The objective of this study is to identify clinical, demographic, and historical factors associated with short-term seizure recurrence which might merit an observational period in children who have suffered a febrile seizure. This retrospective cohort study included children aged 12 months to 5 years who presented to the PED with a single generalized seizure in the setting of fever ≥ 38 °C. Current hospital policy recommends a 6-h period of observation in the PED for all such children, and admission for those who undergo a second seizure. Statistical analyses included comparisons between children with and without seizure recurrence, and logistic regression to identify predictors of hospitalization. Of 1496 children screened, 1404 met inclusion criteria. Seizure recurrence occurred in 27 (1.9%) of patients—all within 3 h of presentation. None of the following factors predicted seizure recurrence: gender, ethnic group, family history of febrile seizures, prior SFS, duration of fever before seizure, or peak fever. Conclusion: The short-term recurrence of febrile seizures was low (1.9%) and occurred within hours of the index seizure. Since the recurrence rate was low, and considering the benign outcomes of SFS, an observation period may not be warranted. Children who are stable and have regained neurological function may be considered for early discharge with appropriate caregiver education and follow-up, as already practiced in some centers. 
What is Known:• Simple febrile seizures are frequent and often benign occurrences in children.• Guidelines discourage extensive tests but omit specific observation protocols.What is New:• Seizure recurrence after simple febrile seizures is very low and usually occurs within the first 3 h after the initial seizure.• After a simple febrile seizure, children may be considered for early discharge once they return to baseline function, without the need for an extended observation period.

What is Known:

• Simple febrile seizures are frequent and often benign occurrences in children.

• Guidelines discourage extensive tests but omit specific observation protocols.

What is New:

• Seizure recurrence after simple febrile seizures is very low and usually occurs within the first 3 h after the initial seizure.

• After a simple febrile seizure, children may be considered for early discharge once they return to baseline function, without the need for an extended observation period.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Seizure (MESH:D012640), fever (MESH:D005334), SFS (MESH:D003294)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12644193