Breath-Holding Spells
Basics
DESCRIPTION
- Breath-holding spells are the general term for emotionally provoked attacks that occur in young children. These attacks can progress from a strong emotion to “breath holding” to decreased sensorium and either limpness or stiffness, which can appear as seizure-like activity.
 - Disease essentials
- Provoked by anger, pain, or frustration
 - Association with altered respiratory effort
 - Results in decreased muscle tone
 - Can be classified as simple (brief, no loss of consciousness) or severe (prolonged, associated loss of consciousness)
 
 - Subtypes
- Cyanotic (80%)
- Classic breath-holding spells
 - Typically associated with anger
 - Progress from crying to exhalation to apnea and syncope to decreased muscle tone and falling
 - May also note generalized clonic jerks, opisthotonos, and bradycardia
 - Ages: 6 months to a peak at 2 years, with resolution by 5 years
 
 - Pallid (20%)
- Typically associated with pain, frustration, or surprise
 - Progress from quieting to apnea (at the end of expiration) to syncope to decreased muscle tone and falling
 - May also note clenched hands and clonic jerks and bradycardia
 
 
 - Cyanotic (80%)
 
EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Incidence: not reported
 - Prevalence: 4.6% (severe), up to 27% (simple)
 - No gender difference
 - 20–35% have a positive family history
 - Age/frequency
- Median age of onset 6 to 12 months of age
 - Typically ages 1 to 5 years but can occur up to 7 years of age
 - Usually resolve by school age
 - Frequency
- Can occur several times per day to only once a year
 - Age of peak frequency of spells is from 1 to 2 years of age.
 
 
 
RISK-FACTORS
- Underlying autonomic regulatory dysfunction
 - Inheritance
- 20–35% of patients with breath-holding spells have a positive family history.
 - 11% of patients with epilepsy or other chronic, but nonneurologic disorder have a positive family history of breath-holding spells.
 - For 80% of patients with severe spells and a positive family history, the affected family members are mainly on the maternal side.
 - An autosomal dominant trait with reduced penetrance has been noted in some.
 
 
GENERAL-PREVENTION
- There are no known methods, medications, or treatments for preventing breath-holding spells.
 - Although the term breath-holding spells implies volition, these attacks are involuntary and reflexive.
 - For a variety of reasons, emotional outbursts are common in this age group; however, appeasing a child to prevent a spell is not recommended as it may lead the child to develop other, similar-appearing behaviors encouraging parental concession.
 
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
- Cyanotic breath-holding spells
- Syncope due to a Valsalva maneuver increasing the intrathoracic pressure, decreasing cardiac blood return and eventually cardiac output, which causes cerebral hypoperfusion and unconsciousness
 
 - Pallid breath-holding spells
- Abnormal vagal response to emotional stimulation causing bradycardia and/or asystole, leading to decreased cardiac output and cerebral ischemia and unconsciousness
 
 
ETIOLOGY
Always provoked by anger, pain, or frustration
ASSOCIATED-CONDITIONS
- No definitive associated conditions
 - There have been reports of some children with breath-holding spells going on to have syncope and/or seizures.
 - Anemia:
- Some studies have noted an increased prevalence of anemia in children with breath-holding spells; the anemia and spells improved over time with iron treatment.
 - Although these findings also coincide with the expected timing for resolution of breath-holding spells, anemia might complicate an individual child’s picture.
 - The suggested mechanisms for iron deficiency associated with breath-holding spells include lowered oxygen levels in the central nervous system, catecholamine disruption, and increased crying/fussiness (known trigger) with iron deficiency.
 
 - New research has found an association between the frequency of breath-holding spells and the frequency of respiratory sinus arrhythmia.
 - There is an increased risk of vasovagal syncope in adolescents and adults, who had pallid breath-holding spells as children.
 
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Citation
Cabana, Michael D., editor. "Breath-Holding Spells." Select 5-Minute Pediatrics Topics, 7th ed., Wolters Kluwer Health, 2015. Medicine Central, im.unboundmedicine.com/medicine/view/Select-5-Minute-Pediatric-Consult/14045/all/Breath_Holding_Spells. 
Breath-Holding Spells. In: Cabana MDM, ed. Select 5-Minute Pediatrics Topics. Wolters Kluwer Health; 2015. https://im.unboundmedicine.com/medicine/view/Select-5-Minute-Pediatric-Consult/14045/all/Breath_Holding_Spells. Accessed November 4, 2025.
Breath-Holding Spells. (2015). In Cabana, M. D. (Ed.), Select 5-Minute Pediatrics Topics (7th ed.). Wolters Kluwer Health. https://im.unboundmedicine.com/medicine/view/Select-5-Minute-Pediatric-Consult/14045/all/Breath_Holding_Spells
Breath-Holding Spells [Internet]. In: Cabana MDM, editors. Select 5-Minute Pediatrics Topics. Wolters Kluwer Health; 2015. [cited 2025 November 04]. Available from: https://im.unboundmedicine.com/medicine/view/Select-5-Minute-Pediatric-Consult/14045/all/Breath_Holding_Spells.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
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Select 5-Minute Pediatrics Topics

