24‐hour pattern of childhood febrile seizures substantiated by time series meta‐analysis: circadian medicine perspectives

SUMMARY

Objectives

Major objectives of this work were to: (i) substantiate the 24-hour pattern in the occurrence of childhood febrile seizures (CFSs) by a novel time series meta-analysis of past reported time-of-day data and (ii) discuss its potential circadian rhythm-dependencies.

Methods

Comprehensive search of the published literature retrieved eight articles that met inclusion criteria. Three investigations were conducted in Iran, two in Japan, and one each in Finland, Italy, and South Korea, representing a total of 2461 mostly simple febrile seizures of children who on average were about two years of age.

Results

Population Mean Cosinor Analysis validated (P<0.001) a 24-hour pattern in the onset of CFSs, with an approximate four-fold difference in the proportion of children expressing seizures at its peak, at 18:04 h (95% confidence limits: 16:40 to 19:07 h) vs. trough at 06:00 h.

Significance

The CFS time-of-day pattern likely derives from the actions of multiple circadian rhythms, particularly the cytokines that comprise the pyrogenic inflammatory pathway and melatonin that influences the excitation level of central neurons and helps regulate body temperature. Past laboratory animal and patient investigations document the vulnerability to a seizure by a provoking trigger of the same intensity is not the same but different in a predictable-in-time manner during the 24 hours as a circadian susceptibility/resistance rhythm. Knowledge of the marked disparity in the time-of-day risk of CFSs can be translated into improved prevention, particularly during the late afternoon and early evening when highest, through proper timing of prophylactic interventions.

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