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What is the difference between "Breath Holding Spells" and "Reflex Anoxic Seizures"? Resolved

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How do you differentiate between breath holding spells and reflex anoxic seizures?
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Posted  2 weeks  ago by  *************@*************
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Comparison: Breath-Holding Spells vs Reflex Anoxic Seizures

Pathophysiology

FeatureBreath-Holding Spells (BHS)Reflex Anoxic Seizures (RAS)
Mechanism Autonomic dysregulation involving prolonged expiratory apnea after crying or frustration Cardiovascular reflex-mediated transient asystole in response to sudden pain or fright
Trigger Emotional distress (crying, frustration, anger) Unexpected pain (e.g. bump), fright, or minor trauma
Cause of unconsciousness Hypoxia due to breath-holding Transient cerebral hypoperfusion from cardiac asystole

Age of Onset

FeatureBHSRAS
Typical Age 6 months to 4 years 6 months to 4 years (peak at ~18 months)

Clinical Features

FeatureBreath-Holding Spells (BHS)Reflex Anoxic Seizures (RAS)
Preceding Cry Present (cyanotic type) or absent (pallid type) Usually no prolonged crying
Colour Change Cyanotic (most common) or pallid Pallor is typical
Loss of Consciousness May or may not occur Always occurs, typically sudden
Seizure-like Movements Sometimes – due to cerebral hypoxia Common – due to brain hypoperfusion
Duration Usually brief (10–30 sec) Brief (less than 1 minute)
Recovery Rapid and complete Rapid and complete
EEG Normal Normal unless prolonged anoxia
Cardiac Monitoring Usually not necessary May show bradycardia or asystole

Investigations

FeatureBHSRAS
Workup Clinical diagnosis; consider iron studies ECG, Holter, tilt test; exclude long QT syndrome
Iron Status Iron deficiency common and treatable No proven benefit

Management

FeatureBHSRAS
Acute Reassurance; safe positioning Reassurance; avoid trigger
Chronic Parental reassurance; iron therapy if deficient Avoid known triggers; pacemaker rarely needed
Medications Not indicated Not indicated

Summary Table

AspectBreath-Holding SpellsReflex Anoxic Seizures
Trigger Emotional stimulus Pain/fear stimulus
Primary System Respiratory/autonomic Cardiovascular/autonomic
Colour Cyanosis or pallor Pallor
Onset Gradual (with cry) Sudden
Movements May occur Often occur
Recovery Rapid Rapid
Long-term Risk Benign Benign; pacemaker in rare cases

Clinical Pearl

Pallid BHS and RAS may appear similar. However, in RAS there is typically no crying beforehand and the episode is immediate after impact or fright. EEG is not diagnostic unless epilepsy is suspected.

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Posted  2 weeks  ago Edited  2 weeks  ago

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