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1.
IJCN-Iranian Journal of Child Neurology. 2008; 2 (3): 37-40
em Inglês | IMEMR | ID: emr-86736

RESUMO

Febrile convulsions [FC] are the most common convulsive events in childhood, occurring in 2-5% of children. About one third of these children will have a recurrence during a subsequent febrile infection. This sudden neurologic problem is extremely frightening and emotionally traumatic for parents so some physicians try to prevent recurrence of FC by prescribing different drugs. This is a randomized clinical trial in 85 healthy children, aged 6 months to 5 years, who were not treated before. These children received randomly either oral diazepam [0.33 mg/kg/TDS for two days during febrile illness] or continuous oral Phenobarbital [3-5mg/kg /24 h]. Ultimately 64 patients completed the study and were followed up for an average of 13 months [12-18 months]. The rate of recurrence of febrile seizure was 18.2% in diazepam group and 32.3% in Phenobarbital group; the difference is not statistically significant [p=0.16]. There was no significant difference between intermittent oral diazepam and continuous oral Phenobarbital for FC prevention


Assuntos
Humanos , Masculino , Feminino , Diazepam , Fenobarbital , Anticonvulsivantes , Convulsões Febris/prevenção & controle , Recidiva , Estudos Prospectivos
2.
Iranian Journal of Pediatrics. 2005; 15 (2): 145-150
em Persa | IMEMR | ID: emr-71025

RESUMO

Febrile seizures are the most common convulsive events in childhood, occurring in 2-5% of children. About one third of these children will have a recurrence during a subsequent febrile infection. This is a randomized clinical trial in 85 healthy children, aged 6 months to 5 years, who were not treated before. These children received randomly either oral diazepam [0.33 mg/kg/tds for two days during febrile illness] or continuous oral Phenobarbital [3-5mg/kg /24 h]. Ultimately 64 patients completed the study and were followed up for an average of 13 months [12-18 months]. The rate of recurrence of febrile seizure was 18.2% in diazepam group and 32.3% in phenobarbital group; the difference is not statistically significant [p=0.16]. There was no significant difference between intermittent oral diazepam or continuous oral phenobarbital


Assuntos
Humanos , Diazepam , Fenobarbital , Ensaios Clínicos Controlados Aleatórios como Assunto , Recidiva
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