Wu Yan-Zhang, Liu Yao-Hua, Tseng Chien-Ming, Tseng Yung-Hao, Chen Tai-Heng
Division of Pediatric Emergency, Department of Pediatrics, Kaohsiung Medical University Hospital, Kaohsiung Medical University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan.
Department of Emergency, Kaohsiung Municipal Siaogang Hospital, Kaohsiung Medical University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan.
Front Pediatr. 2020 Apr 16;8:167. doi: 10.3389/fped.2020.00167. eCollection 2020.
Acute gastroenteritis (AGE) accompanied by seizures is not a rare scenario in childhood. We investigated the clinical features of children with febrile or afebrile seizures during AGE and aimed to identify the impact of fever in this situation-related seizure. We retrospectively reviewed the medical charts of children admitted due to seizures associated with mild AGE between January 2008 and December 2017. These consecutive patients were divided into two groups: an "afebrile group" whose diagnosis was compatible with "benign convulsion with mild gastroenteritis (CwG)" and a "febrile group" who had a fever within 24 h of the onset of an AGE-related seizure. We compared the two groups' clinical and laboratory characteristics, electroencephalograms (EEG), neuroimaging, and outcomes. Of the children suffering from AGE and seizures, 41 were afebrile and 30 were febrile, with a mean age of 32.2 ± 27.6 months. The gender, seizure semiology, frequency, duration of seizures, the time interval between AGE symptoms onset and first seizure, and levels of serum sodium, and hepatic enzymes were significantly different between the two groups. The most frequently identified enteropathogen was rotavirus (33%), especially in the male and febrile subjects. Afebrile patients had more EEG abnormalities initially, but all returned to normal later. All cases had an uneventful outcome. Of note, seizure clusters (≥2 episodes) occurred more frequently in the afebrile patients who had a duration of AGE symptoms lasting 2 days or more, or white blood cell counts ≥ 10,000/μL (-values: 0.05 and 0.04, respectively). In comparison with seven similar studies, all showed more seizure clusters, partial seizures, and a shorter interval between AGE onset and seizures in afebrile patients than in febrile patients. Contrarily, afebrile patients had longer seizure duration and lower serum hepatic transaminases than febrile patients. Although fever partially influenced the clinical features of AGE-related seizures, febrile CwG might have pathophysiology distinctly different from that of febrile seizures. Comprehensive knowledge in discerning febrile and afebrile CwG can help to avoid unnecessary diagnostics tests, and anticonvulsants use.
急性胃肠炎(AGE)伴发惊厥在儿童时期并非罕见情况。我们调查了AGE期间出现热性或无热惊厥儿童的临床特征,旨在确定发热在此类与情况相关惊厥中的影响。我们回顾性分析了2008年1月至2017年12月因轻度AGE相关惊厥入院儿童的病历。这些连续的患者被分为两组:诊断符合“轻度胃肠炎伴良性惊厥(CwG)”的“无热组”和在AGE相关惊厥发作24小时内发热的“发热组”。我们比较了两组的临床和实验室特征、脑电图(EEG)、神经影像学及转归情况。在患有AGE和惊厥的儿童中,41例无热,30例发热,平均年龄为32.2±27.6个月。两组在性别、惊厥症状学、发作频率、发作持续时间、AGE症状发作至首次惊厥的时间间隔以及血清钠和肝酶水平方面存在显著差异。最常鉴定出的肠道病原体是轮状病毒(33%),尤其是在男性和发热患者中。无热患者最初脑电图异常较多,但后来均恢复正常。所有病例转归均良好。值得注意的是,在AGE症状持续2天或更长时间或白细胞计数≥10,000/μL的无热患者中,惊厥簇(≥2次发作)更频繁出现(P值分别为0.05和0.04)。与七项类似研究相比,所有研究均显示无热患者的惊厥簇、部分性发作更多,且AGE发作至惊厥的间隔时间比发热患者短。相反,无热患者的惊厥持续时间更长,血清肝转氨酶水平比发热患者低。虽然发热部分影响了AGE相关惊厥的临床特征,但热性CwG的病理生理学可能与热性惊厥明显不同。全面了解热性和无热CwG有助于避免不必要的诊断检查和抗惊厥药物的使用。