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Review Article

IJMDC. 2026; 10(1): 408-416


Prevalence, diagnosis, and management of febrile seizures in children: a systematic review

Maher S. Shalabi, Muhannad Muslih Alhazmi, Mussab Zakaria Almaghrabi, Renad Alkenedri, Rena Aljahdli, Reema Saeed Almater, Ruba Mohammed Al Murayyi, Rawan Mohammed Al-Qahtani, Fatoon Mohammed Alamri, Lamia Ahmed Saddah.



Abstract
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Febrile seizures (FS) are the most common type of pediatric seizures, affecting 2-5% of children between six months and five years worldwide. Scientific research in recent years has paved the way for the exploration of many new tools to improve early assessment. Despite these advances, there is still uncertainty about how common different forms of febrile seizures are, which risk factors matter most, and which investigations truly help guide care. The review followed the PRISMA 2020 guidelines, and was analyzed using RevMan version 5.4.0. The Newcastle–Ottawa Scale (NOS) was applied to evaluate the methodological quality of included observational studies, and the Cochrane Risk of Bias tool was used to assess randomized studies. This systematic review compiled recent findings from 11 studies on prevalence, diagnostic indicators, and management. The progression to febrile status epilepticus was linked to younger age (

Key words: Febrile seizures, pediatric seizures, febrile status epilepticus, prevalence, diagnosis, management, systematic review.







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