# Complex Febrile Seizures As the Initial Presentation of Nutritional Rickets Due to Severe Vitamin D Deficiency

**Authors:** Tuqa A Abdulsalam, Mina Almanasir, Gokul Erumbala

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.99346 · 2025-12-16

## TL;DR

A breastfed infant with complex seizures was found to have severe vitamin D deficiency, highlighting the need to check calcium and vitamin D levels in such cases.

## Contribution

This case report highlights nutritional rickets as a potential cause of complex febrile seizures in infants.

## Key findings

- An eight-month-old infant with complex seizures had severe vitamin D deficiency and hypocalcemia.
- Treatment with calcium and vitamin D resolved the seizures and corrected metabolic abnormalities.
- The case emphasizes the importance of checking calcium and vitamin D levels in infants with complex febrile seizures.

## Abstract

Simple febrile attacks are common in young children and are typically benign. However, complex febrile seizures are characterized by recurrence, focal features, or longer duration and require assessment to determine underlying causes, such as metabolic issues like hypocalcemia. Vitamin D deficiency rickets, a preventable yet re-emerging disease, can also present with seizures.

We report a previously healthy, exclusively breastfed eight-month-old boy who developed three episodes of general tonic seizures, initially thought to be triggered by an upper respiratory infection. Further workup revealed hypocalcemia (total calcium of 6.8 mg/dL, ionized calcium of 0.91 mmol/L), severe vitamin D deficiency (25-hydroxyvitamin D of 3.5 ng/mL), low phosphate, elevated alkaline phosphatase, and a high serum parathyroid hormone level, all indicative of nutritional rickets. Other factors that may have contributed to the worsening of his ionized calcium included mild respiratory alkalosis. The patient was treated with IV calcium gluconate, followed by maintenance oral calcium and vitamin D. After the correction of hypocalcemia, he had no further seizures and was discharged.

This case underscores the importance of monitoring ionized calcium and vitamin D levels in an exclusively breastfed infant who presents with complex febrile seizures. The sudden decline in ionized calcium, leading to seizures in a susceptible patient, along with fever-induced alkalosis, could be the triggering factors. Prompt diagnosis and appropriate treatment can reduce the risk of neurologic complications from nutritional rickets, thus improving the outcome.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** calcium (PubChem CID 5460341), calcium gluconate (PubChem CID 9290)
- **Diseases:** nutritional rickets (MONDO:0005520), hypocalcemia (MONDO:0018543)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** PTH (parathyroid hormone) [NCBI Gene 5741] {aka FIH1, PTH1}
- **Diseases:** fever (MESH:D005334), neurologic complications (MESH:D002493), respiratory infection (MESH:D012141), alkalosis (MESH:D000471), seizures (MESH:D012640), Febrile Seizures (MESH:D003294), Vitamin D Deficiency (MESH:D014808), febrile (MESH:D000071072), hypocalcemia (MESH:D006996), Vitamin D deficiency rickets (MESH:D063730), Nutritional Rickets (MESH:D012279), respiratory alkalosis (MESH:D000472)
- **Chemicals:** vitamin D (MESH:D014807), 25-hydroxyvitamin D (MESH:C104450), phosphate (MESH:D010710), calcium gluconate (MESH:D002125), calcium (MESH:D002118)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12805410/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12805410