What is Epilepsy?
What is the Difference Between Seizures and Epilepsy?
Which Doctors Treat Epilepsy?
What Should I Consider if My Child Has Only Had a Single
Seizure?
What Causes Epilepsy?
What Should I Do if I Suspect My Child Has a Seizure
Disorder?
How is Epilepsy Diagnosed?
How Can People Guard Against Having Seizures?
When someone has epilepsy, this normal pattern may be interrupted by intermittent bursts of electrical energy that are more intense than usual. They may affect a person’s consciousness, body movements or sensations for a short time. These physical changes are called seizures. When a person has repeated seizures or a tendency to have seizures that can be seen on a brain wave test called an electroencephalogram (EEG), we often say that the person has epilepsy. Epilepsy is sometimes called a seizure disorder. The usual bursts of energy may occur in just one area of the brain (partial seizures) or may affect nerve cells throughout the brain (generalized seizures). Normal brain function cannot return until the electrical bursts stop.
People can be born with conditions of the brain that produce these episodes or they can develop them later in life because of injury, infections, structural abnormalities in the brain, exposure to toxic agents or for reasons that are unexplainable.
Illnesses or severe injuries can affect the brain enough to produce a single seizure. When seizures continue to occur for unknown reasons or because of an underlying problem that cannot be corrected, the condition is known as epilepsy. Epilepsy affects people of all ages, nationalities and races, and affects animals as well.
Epilepsy, on the other hand, is an underlying condition that affects the delicate systems that govern how electrical energy behaves in the brain, making the brain susceptible to recurring seizures.
The most important factor in deciding whether to begin drug treatment for a single seizure is the probability of further seizures. Physicians use both diagnostic tests and careful evaluations of the seizure itself to determine how likely it is that another seizure will occur. Age, family history and possible causes of the seizure are among the factors that are considered.
Epilepsy is often thought of as a condition of childhood, but it can develop at any time during life. About 30 percent of the 125,000 new cases every year begin in childhood, particularly in early childhood and around the time of adolescence.
A second major tool is an electroencephalogram (EEG). This laboratory test is done with a machine that records brain waves picked up by tiny wires taped to the head. Electrical signals from brain cells are recorded as wavy lines by the machine. Brain waves during or between seizures may show special patterns that help the doctor decide whether someone has epilepsy. Imaging (picture-taking) methods such as computerized tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans may be used to search for growths, scars or other physical conditions in the brain that may be causing the seizures. In a few research centers like Children’s Hospital, positron emission tomography (PET) imaging is used to identify areas of the brain that are producing seizures, especially in those patients in whom surgery is being considered as a seizure treatment.
A person with epilepsy can help control seizures by taking the prescribed medication regularly, maintaining regular sleep cycles, avoiding unusual stress and working closely with his or her physician. Regular medical evaluation and follow-up visits also are important. However, seizures may occur even when these steps are followed. If your child is diagnosed with epilepsy, your child’s doctor will help you find the medication and daily regimen that works best to control the seizures.
Updated 10/24/07