Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0240066 (iron deficiency)
7,156 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

To determine the effect of iron status on the seizure threshold, measures of iron sufficiency were prospectively evaluated in 51 children presenting to a pediatric emergency department with a febrile illness with (26) or without (25) an associated febrile seizure. A higher proportion of children from the febrile seizure group had a family history of mental retardation (5/26 versus 0/25, P = .02) or of previous febrile seizures (10/26 versus 2/23, P = .01). The two groups were otherwise comparable for age, sex, race, family history of afebrile seizures, temperature at presentation, white blood cell count, differential, and vitamin and antibiotic use. Patients with febrile seizures were less frequently iron deficient as defined by a free erythrocyte protoporphyrin level above 0.80 ng/L (2/23 versus 10/25, P < .01), hemoglobin concentration less than 110 g/L (1/26 versus 6/25, P < .03), hematocrit less than 0.30 L/L (0/22 versus 4/25, P < .02), mean corpuscular hemoglobin less than 20 pg (0/25 versus 3/24, P < .04), mean corpuscular volume less than 65 fL (0/26 versus 4/24, P < .02), and platelet count higher than 550 x 10(9)/L (0/26 versus 3/25, P < .04). This association was even stronger when adjusted for differences in family history. None of the patients in the febrile seizure group was being treated for iron deficiency at presentation, whereas three of 25 controls used an iron supplement (P < .04). Iron deficiency may protect against the development of febrile seizures.
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PMID:Does iron deficiency raise the seizure threshold? 778 98

We conducted this study to determine the role of iron deficiency as a risk factor for first febrile seizure in children. Fifty children between 6 months to 6 years with first febrile seizure (Cases) and 50 children with febrile illness but without convulsions (Controls) were enrolled from the pediatric ward of a tertiary care hospital. Iron deficiency was determined by estimation of hemoglobin, red blood cell indices and serum ferritin. The mean serum ferritin level (microg/L) was significantly low in Cases (31.9 +/- 31.0) as compared to Controls (53.9 +/- 56.5) with P = 0.003. Iron deficiency could be a potential risk factor for febrile seizure in children.
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PMID:Iron deficiency as a risk factor for first febrile seizure. 1973 64