What are the symptoms of pediatric convulsions

Common symptoms of pediatric convulsions include convulsions, confusion, breathlessness, coma, and urinary incontinence. In the early stages, children may experience extreme irritability, nervousness and sudden shortness of breath, and some children may also experience a sudden rise in body temperature and pupil size variations. As the disease progresses, the child may also experience loss of consciousness and tonic convulsions of the face and limb muscles. In some children with more severe symptoms, convulsions may last for more than 30 minutes, during which time there is a high fever and transient loss of consciousness, and in severe cases, the child’s eyes are rolled back or squinted, and the child foams at the mouth and becomes incontinent. If the child develops the above symptoms of convulsions, it is recommended to consult the hospital in time to avoid delaying the condition.