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EEG for children with complex febrile seizures

Abstract

Background

Febrile seizures can be classified as simple or complex. Complex febrile seizures are associated with fever that lasts longer than 15 minutes, occur more than once within 24 hours, and are confined to one side of the child’s body. It is common in some countries for doctors to recommend an electroencephalograph (EEG) for children with complex febrile seizures. A limited evidence base is available to support the use of EEG and its timing after complex febrile seizures among children.

Objectives

To assess the use of EEG and its timing after complex febrile seizures in children younger than five years of age.

Search methods

For the latest update of this review, we searched the following databases on 12 March 2019: Cochrane Register of Studies (CRS Web), which includes the Cochrane Epilepsy Group Specialized Register and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL); MEDLINE (Ovid, 1946 to 11 March 2019); and ClinicalTrials.gov. We applied no language restrictions.

Selection criteria

All randomised controlled trials (RCTs) that examined the utility of an EEG and its timing after complex febrile seizures in children.

Data collection and analysis

The review authors selected and retrieved the articles and independently assessed which articles should be included. Any disagreements were resolved by discussion and by consultation with the Cochrane Epilepsy Group. We applied standard methodological procedures expected by Cochrane.

Main results

Of 48 potentially eligible studies, no RCTs met the inclusion criteria.

Authors’ conclusions

We found no RCTs as evidence to support or refute the use of EEG and its timing after complex febrile seizures among children under the age of five. An RCT can be planned in such a way that participants are randomly assigned to the EEG group and to the non‐EEG group with sufficient sample size. Since the last version of this review, we have found no new studies.

Plain language summary

EEG for children with complex febrile seizures

Background
Febrile seizures (fits) can be classified as simple or complex. Complex febrile seizures are associated with a high temperature (fever), last longer than 15 minutes, occur more than once within 24 hours, and are confined to one side of the child’s body. It is common in some countries for doctors to recommend an electroencephalograph (EEG), which records electrical activity in the brain, on children with complex febrile seizures. The EEG may help identify why the seizures occur and predict the risk of future seizures.

Study characteristics
We searched scientific databases for randomised controlled trials (clinical studies where people are randomly put into one of two or more treatment groups; these are regarded as a gold standard for trial design) that compared EEG with no EEG or a delayed EEG (occurring at second seizure) in children under five years of age with a first complex febrile seizure. We planned to look at the number of seizures that occurred at 1, 6, 12, and 24 months after EEG.

Key results and quality of the evidence
We attempted to search all possible sources but were unable to find any randomised controlled trials to address the issue up to 12 March 2019. We concluded that there is no high‐quality evidence to support or refute the use of an EEG and its timing after complex febrile seizures in children. Well‐designed randomised controlled trials are therefore required. We intend to update this review regularly with the hope that new randomised studies will be reported in the future.

Authors’ conclusions

Implications for practice

Although it is common for both paediatricians and specialists in some countries to recommend electroencephalographs (EEG) for children with complex febrile seizures (Joshi 2005Millichap 1991), evidence to support or refute the use of EEG and its timing after complex febrile seizures among children is lacking. We have found no new studies since the last version of this review.

Implications for research

This review highlighted the absence of randomised controlled trials (RCTs) investigating the utility of EEG and its timing after complex febrile seizures in children. We found no RCT evidence to support or refute the utility of EEG and its timing after complex febrile seizures in children. A randomised controlled trial can be planned in such a way that participants are randomly assigned to an EEG group and a non‐EEG group with sufficient sample size. Hence, well‐designed RCTs are required to confirm or refute the utility of EEG. These clinical trials should follow good clinical practice guidelines with an emphasis on methodological issues such as randomisation, blinding of outcome assessment, intention‐to‐treat analysis, and scientific means to reduce bias.Updating the review: in accordance with Cochrane policy, we plan to update this review every two years (or sooner, should we find any important study that fulfils the inclusion criteria).

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