Bacterial meningitis is uncommon in children who present with a first complex febrile seizure.
In a retrospective chart review, researchers examined the rate of acute bacterial meningitis (ABM) in 526 otherwise healthy children (age range, 6–60 months) who presented with their first complex febrile seizure (focal seizures, duration >15 minutes, multiple seizures within 24 hours) to a tertiary care pediatric emergency department in Boston between 1995 and 2008.
A total of 156 children (29%) were pretreated with antibiotics. Of 340 patients (65%) who underwent lumbar puncture (LP), 14 (2.7%) had cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) pleocytosis (white blood cell count >7 cells/µL). Three patients (0.9%) were diagnosed with ABM; two had Streptococcus pneumoniae in CSF culture and one, in whom LP was not successful, had S. pneumoniae in blood culture…
Reviewing Authors
DisclosuresGrant / research supportHuman Resources and Services Administration; NIH; NIH-NHLBI; USDA; GlaxoSmithKline
Editorial boardsArchives of Disease in Childhood (Editor-in-Chief)
DisclosuresGrant / research supportHuman Resources and Services Administration; NIH; NIH-NHLBI; USDA; GlaxoSmithKline
Editorial boardsArchives of Disease in Childhood (Editor-in-Chief)
DisclosuresRoyaltiesEmergency Medicine Secrets (Elsevier)
Grant/Research SupportDepartment of Justice
Editorial BoardsEmergency Medicine Secrets (Elsevier); Rosen’s Emergency Medicine (Elsevier)
DisclosuresRoyaltiesEmergency Medicine Secrets (Elsevier)
Grant/Research SupportDepartment of Justice
Editorial BoardsEmergency Medicine Secrets (Elsevier); Rosen’s Emergency Medicine (Elsevier)