Febrile Seizures for families from Adoni
Fever-triggered seizures are the most common childhood neurological event. Most are benign - but knowing when to worry and what to do is vital for every parent.
Febrile seizures occur in 2–5% of children aged 6 months to 5 years during a fever episode. They are usually brief, generalized, and self-limiting. Simple febrile seizures do not cause brain damage or epilepsy in the vast majority of children. At Dr. Rampally's Kurnool clinic, we evaluate the child, assess recurrence risk, counsel families on first-aid, and decide whether EEG or further workup is needed.
Quick Appointment
Takes less than 1 minute
When to seek urgent help?
Seek immediate emergency care when an episode lasts unusually long (more than 5 minutes), repeats without recovery, affects breathing, follows an injury, or the child does not regain normal responsiveness.
Does this look familiar in your child?
Shaking or stiffening during fever (temperature > 38°C)
Loss of consciousness during the episode
Episode lasting less than 5 minutes (simple)
Episode lasting > 15 minutes or focal (complex)

Understanding this condition
Neurological conditions in children affect developmental milestones, learning abilities, and overall physical functions. A clear clinical history, developmental timeline, and specialist physical evaluation are essential steps to avoid diagnostic delay.
Dr. Swetha identifies the underlying cause by looking at both clinical symptoms and diagnostic results, guiding you to therapies that yield the best results for your child's age group.
Tests that may be considered
Pediatric Neurology Consultation
Comprehensive clinical exam.
Detailed Developmental Review
Milestone checklist and evaluation.
Treatment & management approach
The care plan depends on the child's symptoms, diagnosis, age, investigation findings, and overall development. We prioritize minimal effective medications to prevent side effects, titrated gradually.
Parents receive detailed guidance on follow-up requirements, medication timelines, emergency first-aid protocols, and developmental therapy instructions.
What parents should bring to the clinic
Scan Reports
Previous Scripts
Episode Videos
Birth History
Milestone Details
Insurance Docs
Related Information Guides
Common Concerns (FAQ)
Q. Will my child get epilepsy after febrile seizures?
The risk of developing epilepsy after simple febrile seizures is only slightly higher than the general population (about 2–3%). The vast majority of children who have febrile seizures never develop epilepsy.
Specialist Trust Points
Local Consultation Info
There is no branch inside Adoni. Evaluation happens at the Kurnool primary clinic. We prioritize scheduling to complete diagnostics and consultation in one day for families from Adoni.
Route: Adoni-Yemmiganur-Kurnool road or Aspari route. Express buses available.
Travel: approx 2h 10m drive (105 km)

What parents should bring to the clinic
Scan Reports
Previous Scripts
Episode Videos
Birth History
Milestone Details
Insurance Docs
Related Information Guides
Common Concerns (FAQ)
Q. Will my child get epilepsy after febrile seizures?
The risk of developing epilepsy after simple febrile seizures is only slightly higher than the general population (about 2–3%). The vast majority of children who have febrile seizures never develop epilepsy.
Need specialized care for Febrile Seizures?
Schedule an evaluation with Dr. Swetha Rampally. Bring any past test reports, prescriptions, or mobile video recordings of symptoms.