Skip to content
TwitterFacebookInstagramRss
Emergency Medicine Cases Logo Emergency Medicine Cases Logo Emergency Medicine Cases Logo
  • Home
  • Podcasts
    • Main Episodes
    • EM Quick Hits
    • Best Case Ever
    • Journal Jam
  • Blogs
    • ECG Cases
    • Journal Club
    • EMC GEM
    • CritCases
    • Waiting to Be Seen
    • BEEM Cases
  • Summaries
    • EMC Cases Summaries
    • Résumés EM Cases
    • Rapid Reviews Videos
    • EM Cases Digest
  • Videos
    • EM Cases Summit
    • Rapid Reviews
    • POCUS Cases
    • EMU 365
  • Quiz Vault
  • About
    • Our Team
    • Advisory Board
    • Experts Bios
    • Newsletter Sign Up
    • EM Cases Learning System
    • Courses & Summit
    • CME Credits
    • FOAMed
    • Feedback
    • Conflict of Interest Policy
  • Home
  • Podcasts
    • Main Episodes
    • EM Quick Hits
    • Best Case Ever
    • Journal Jam
  • Blogs
    • ECG Cases
    • Journal Club
    • EMC GEM
    • CritCases
    • Waiting to Be Seen
    • BEEM Cases
  • Summaries
    • EMC Cases Summaries
    • Résumés EM Cases
    • Rapid Reviews Videos
    • EM Cases Digest
  • Videos
    • EM Cases Summit
    • Rapid Reviews
    • POCUS Cases
    • EMU 365
  • Quiz Vault
  • About
    • Our Team
    • Advisory Board
    • Experts Bios
    • Newsletter Sign Up
    • EM Cases Learning System
    • Courses & Summit
    • CME Credits
    • FOAMed
    • Feedback
    • Conflict of Interest Policy
Previous Next

A healthy 3-year-old female was brought to the ED for a first-time seizure. She is afebrile, was previously well and had a seizure that lasted approximately 1 minute. She seemed slightly confused for 20 minutes after the seizure and has now returned to baseline. The following additional information on history or physical exam should prompt consideration of neuroimaging, except:

By Erica Hoe|2019-04-29T12:39:53-04:00April 29th, 2019|Comments Off on A healthy 3-year-old female was brought to the ED for a first-time seizure. She is afebrile, was previously well and had a seizure that lasted approximately 1 minute. She seemed slightly confused for 20 minutes after the seizure and has now returned to baseline. The following additional information on history or physical exam should prompt consideration of neuroimaging, except:

FacebookTwitterLinkedInEmail

About the Author: Erica Hoe

Subscribe

Subscribe to Podcast

Apple PodcastsGoogle PodcastsAndroidby Email

© 2022 Emergency Medicine Cases | Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions | Contact
TwitterFacebookInstagramRss
Page load link
Go to Top