A seizure is an abnormal electrical discharge of a group of brain cells. Seizures can produce a variety of symptoms, depending on the location of the seizure focus and the spread of the electrical activity through the brain.
What Is Epilepsy?
A person has epilepsy when he/she has more than 1 episode of epileptic seizures.
Causes Of Epilepsy
People with the following conditions can have epilepsy:
• Brain injury
• Brain infection
• Brain tumor
• Stroke
• Genetic susceptibility
In approximately half the cases, a cause cannot be found.
Types Of Seizure
There are 2 main types of seizures:
Focal Seizures
• Affect one part of the body
• Sensory, motor or visual disturbances
• Patient may remain conscious throughout
• Can also lead to loss of consciousness
Generalised Seizures
• Start as a focal seizure and spread throughout the whole brain
• Loss of consciousness of usually between 30 seconds to 5 minutes
• Generalised muscle contraction
• Violent rhythmic muscle relaxation and contraction lasting 1 to 2 minutes
• May exhibit tongue biting, incontinence and difficulty in breathing.
Triggers Of Seizures
The following conditions can trigger a seizure:
• Forgetting to take medication
• Stress
• Lack of sleep
• Menstruation
• Concurrent infection like flu or fever
Diagnosis
Epilepsy is diagnosed based on the information of events that happened during the attack, obtained from the patient and/or observers of the events. The doctor may also order a few investigations:
Electroencephalogram (EEG)
This test is done to record the electrical activity of the brain and takes about 45 minutes to 1 hour. During the test, many electrodes are attached to the patient's head. The patient will also be asked to perform a few tasks to see if these activities activate epileptic seizures.
Brain Scans
Computerised Tomography (CT Scan)
This scan uses computerised X-ray technology to produce pictures of the brain and may reveal structural causes of seizures.
Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
This is scanning of the brain using a strong magnetic field, instead of X-rays. It is more sensitive in picking up subtle structural abnormality that could be the cause of epilepsy. People who had operations with metal implants inserted are not suitable forthis test because of the strong magnetic field.
Treatment
a) Medical Treatment
Anti-epileptic Medications
Medications are usually the first-line of treatment. There are many types of anti-epileptic medications available. The patient may be taking more than one type of anti-epileptic medication, depending on the type of seizure he has.
b) Surgical Treatment
Brain Surgery
Patients with focal seizures not responding to antiepileptic medication might be suitable candidates for surgery depending on where their seizures originate. For those patients without a clear cut resectable lesion, vagal nerve stimulation can be considered.
Side Effects Of Medications
Common side effects include:
• Sleepiness
• Dizziness
• Tiredness
Less common side effects include:
• Hand tremor
• Hair loss
• Blurring of vision
• Weight gain
What To Do When Someone Is Having A Siezure?
DO
Remain calm
Protect the person from harm
Turn the person to the side
Observe the type and duration of seizure
Do Not
Restroom the person unless there is danger
Put anything in the mouth
Crowd around person
What Is Status Epilepticus?
Status Epilepticus is a condition when person has:
continuous seizers for more than 5 to 10 minutes; or
seizures on or off, each lasting less than 5 minutes, but without regaining consciousness in between seizures.
Status Epliepticus is a medical emergency
Send the person to the hospital
Prevention And Precautions
Prevent a seizure from recurring by;
Remembering to take anti-epileptic medications
having sufficient sleep
learning to relax
avoiding alcohol
Avoid
swimming alone /in the sea
climbing to high places
playing computer/electronic games for long duration
bathing in a bathtub
cooking alone/with open fire
Keeping a seizure dairy is useful to :
record the number of seizures
evaluate efficacy of medications
allow the doctor to titrate the medications
DISCLAIMER :
This website is meant
to be guide only...