Etiology and Risk Factors of Febrile Seizure – An Update
Etiology and Risk Factors of Febrile Seizure – An Update
Febrile seizures (FS) are the most common convulsive event in children. This condition has been described since the time of Hippocrates. The etiology of the febrile seizures are still unclear. In FS, there is a strong familial predisposition. This does not exclude infections as a causative factor because subtle genetic polymorphisms have been demonstrated to affect the course of infections. In an earlier review of the world literature (1924-1964), except for roseola infantum, viral infections as a cause of febrile seizures were rarely diagnosed. Reports of viral infections in the etiology of febrile seizures have increased in number in the past decade. In the first half of the twentieth century, infections identified with febrile seizures were mainly upper respiratory in type and the etiologic agent was unknown or bacterial.

