## Correct Answer: A. Diazepam In acute febrile seizures in children, the immediate goal is **rapid seizure termination** to prevent status epilepticus and secondary complications. Diazepam is the first-line agent because it is a **fast-acting benzodiazepine** with rapid CNS penetration, achieving seizure control within 2–5 minutes when given intravenously or rectally. In the acute emergency setting, speed of action is paramount—diazepam's quick onset prevents prolonged seizure activity and its associated metabolic derangements. The Indian Academy of Pediatrics (IAP) and NEET guidelines recommend benzodiazepines (diazepam or lorazepam) as the first-line acute seizure management in febrile convulsions. Diazepam can be given IV (0.1–0.3 mg/kg), IM, or rectally (0.5 mg/kg), making it versatile in emergency settings where IV access may be delayed. While long-term antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) like valproate or phenytoin are used for prophylaxis in recurrent febrile seizures, they are **not suitable for acute seizure termination** due to slower onset of action. The acute phase demands immediate GABA potentiation, which benzodiazepines provide; maintenance AEDs are considered only after the acute seizure is controlled and the underlying fever is addressed. ## Why the other options are wrong **B. Fosphenytoin** — Fosphenytoin (a prodrug of phenytoin) has a slower onset of action (10–20 minutes) compared to diazepam (2–5 minutes) and is primarily used for **seizure prophylaxis** or recurrent seizures, not acute termination. In febrile seizures, the acute phase requires immediate control; fosphenytoin's delayed action makes it unsuitable as first-line. Additionally, phenytoin carries risks of cardiac arrhythmias and tissue necrosis if extravasated—a significant concern in pediatric emergency settings. **C. Valproate** — Valproate is a **long-acting AED** used for prophylaxis in recurrent febrile seizures (especially if seizures are prolonged or frequent), but it has **no role in acute seizure termination**. Its onset is slow (30+ minutes), and it requires hepatic metabolism. In the acute febrile setting, valproate cannot stop an ongoing seizure; it is reserved for maintenance therapy after the acute episode is controlled and fever is managed. **D. Doxycycline / Amoxicillin** — These are **antibiotics**, not antiepileptic drugs, and have no direct role in seizure control. While treating the underlying infection (if bacterial meningitis is suspected) is important, antibiotics do **not terminate seizures**. This option represents a trap: students may confuse the need to treat fever/infection with seizure management. Seizure control must precede or occur simultaneously with antibiotic therapy, not be replaced by it. ## High-Yield Facts - **Diazepam** is the first-line acute seizure terminator in febrile convulsions (onset 2–5 min IV/IM, 5–10 min rectal). - **Benzodiazepines** (diazepam, lorazepam) work via GABA-A potentiation; they are not suitable for long-term monotherapy due to tolerance. - **Febrile seizures** are the most common seizure type in children (3–5% incidence); most are self-limited and do not require long-term AED prophylaxis per IAP guidelines. - **Recurrent febrile seizures** (≥2 episodes or prolonged seizures >15 min) may warrant prophylaxis with valproate or levetiracetam, not acute diazepam. - **Acute seizure management hierarchy**: benzodiazepines (first-line) → fosphenytoin/levetiracetam (second-line) → intubation + anesthesia (refractory status epilepticus). ## Mnemonics **FAST SEIZURE STOP** **F**irst-line = benzodiazepines (Diazepam/Lorazepam) | **A**cute termination (2–5 min) | **S**low starters (phenytoin, valproate) = prophylaxis only | **T**reat fever + underlying cause in parallel. **BZD vs AED in Febrile Seizure** **BZD (Benzodiazepine)** = **Acute** (emergency, fast) | **AED (Antiepileptic Drug)** = **Chronic** (prophylaxis, slow). Diazepam = acute; valproate = chronic. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs febrile seizure with "treatment of infection" to lure students into choosing antibiotics (option D). The trap is conflating **seizure management** (benzodiazepines) with **fever/infection management** (antibiotics)—both are needed, but only benzodiazepines stop the seizure acutely. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian emergency departments, rectal diazepam (0.5 mg/kg) is often preferred in febrile seizures because IV access is frequently delayed in young, seizing children. A 3-year-old with a single febrile seizure typically does not need long-term AED prophylaxis; however, if seizures recur or are prolonged (>15 min), valproate prophylaxis is considered—but never as acute seizure termination. _Reference: OP Ghai (Pediatrics) Ch. 18 (Seizures & Febrile Convulsions); IAP Clinical Practice Guidelines on Febrile Seizures; Harrison Ch. 369 (Seizures)_
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