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Effectiveness of intermittent diazepam prophylaxis in febrile seizures: long-term prospective controlled study.

Author(s): Pavlidou E, Tzitiridou M, Panteliadis C

Affiliation(s): 3rd Department of Pediatrics, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, Greece.

Publication date & source: 2006-12, J Child Neurol., 21(12):1036-40.

Publication type:

The efficacy of intermittent rectal diazepam prophylaxis is assessed in the prevention of febrile seizures. In a prospective randomized cohort trial, 139 children (77 girls, 62 boys) who experienced a first febrile seizure were allocated to two groups: group A, which received intermittent diazepam (n = 68), and group B, which received no prophylaxis (n = 71). All children had a 3-year follow-up. The inclusion criteria were no personal history of afebrile seizures, normal neurodevelopment, no previous anticonvulsant therapy, and age between 6 months and 3 years. Each group was stratified to low, intermediate, and high risk according to the available clinical data. The 36-month recurrence rates in the no-prophylaxis group were 83% in high-risk patients, 55% in intermediate-risk patients, and 46% in low-risk patients. In the prophylaxis group, the recurrence rates were reduced in all risk groups: 38%, 35%, and 33%, respectively. Intermittent diazepam prophylaxis reduces the recurrence rate mainly in high-risk children provided that sufficient doses are given on time and adequately.

Page last updated: 2007-02-12

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