Monday, August 23, 2010

What is Epilepsy/Seizures? - Epilepsy.com



What is Epilepsy?
Epilepsy is a neurological condition, which affects the nervous system. Epilepsy is also known as a seizure disorder. It is usually diagnosed after a person has had at least two seizures that were not caused by some known medical condition like alcohol withdrawal or extremely low blood sugar. Sometimes, according to the International League Against Epilepsy, epilepsy can be diagnosed after one seizure, if a person has a condition that places them at high risk for having another.
The seizures in epilepsy may be related to a brain injury or a family tendency, but most of the time the cause is unknown. The word "epilepsy" does not indicate anything about the cause of the person's seizures, what type they are, or how severe they are.
  
Topic Editor: Carol Camfield, M.D. / Robert S. Fisher, M.D., Ph.D.
Last Reviewed:11/2/08
  
A seizure is a sudden surge of electrical activity in the brain that usually affects how a person feels or acts for a short time. Seizures are not a disease in themselves. Instead, they are a symptom of many different disorders that can affect the brain. Some seizures can hardly be noticed, while others are totally disabling.
The seizures in epilepsy may be related to a brain injury or a family tendency, but often the cause is completely unknown. The word "epilepsy" does not indicate anything about the cause or severity of the person's seizures.
  
If I have one seizure, does that mean I will get epilepsy?
About half of the people who have one seizure without a clear cause will have another one, usually within 6 months. You are twice as likely to have another seizure if you have a known brain injury or other type of brain abnormality. If you do have two seizures, there's about an 80% chance that you'll have more.
If your first seizure occurred at the time of an injury or infection in the brain, you are more likely to develop epilepsy than if you had not had a seizure in that situation.
More seizures are also likely if your doctor finds abnormalities on a neurological examination; a set of tests of the functioning of your nervous system that is performed in the doctor's office.
Another thing that can help your doctor predict whether you will have more seizures is an EEG, electroencephalogram (e-LEK-tro-en-SEF-uh-LOG-ram), a test in which wires attached to your scalp record your brain waves. Certain patterns on the EEG are typical of epilepsy. If your brain waves show patterns of that type, you are about twice as likely to develop epilepsy as someone who does not have those patterns.
Topic Editor: Steven C. Schachter, M.D.
Last Reviewed:11/20/06
  
Example of an Electroencephalogram (EEG)
 
                Normal                            Primary Generalized Epilepsy
  
A seizure is usually defined as a sudden alteration of behavior due to a temporary change in the electrical functioning of the brain, in particular the outside rim of the brain called the cortex. Below you will find some of the symptoms people with epilepsy may experience before, during and after a seizure. Seizures can take on many different forms and seizures affect different people in different ways. It is not implied that every person with seizures will experience every symptom described below.
  
Seizures have a beginning, middle, and end
When an individual is aware of the beginning, it may be thought of as a warning or aura. On the other hand, an individual may not be aware of the beginning and therefore have no warning.
  
Sometimes, the warning or aura is not followed by any other symptoms. It may be considered a simple partial seizure by the doctor.
  
The middle of the seizure may take several different forms. For people who have warnings, the aura may simply continue or it may turn into a complex partial seizure or a convulsion. For those who do not have a warning, the seizure may continue as a complex partial seizure or it may evolve into a convulsion.
The end to a seizure represents a transition from the seizure back to the individual’s normal state. This period is referred to as the “post-ictal period” (an ictus is a seizure) and signifies the recovery period for the brain. It may last from seconds to minutes to hours, depending on several factors including which part(s) of the brain were affected by the seizure and whether the individual was on anti-seizure medication. If a person has a complex partial seizure or a convulsion, their level of awareness gradually improves during the post-ictal period, much like a person waking up from anesthesia after an operation. There are other symptoms that occur during the post-ictal period and are detailed below.
  
Please note: Below is only a partial list, some people may experience other symptoms not listed below. These lists are meant to help patients communicate with their physicians.
  
  
Early seizure symptoms (warnings)
Sensory/Thought:

  • Deja vu

  • Jamais vu

  • Smell

  • Sound

  • Taste

  • Visual loss or blurring

  • Racing thoughts

  • Stomach feelings

  • Strange feelings

  • Tingling feeling


Emotional:

  • Fear/Panic

  • Pleasant feeling


Physical:

  • Dizziness

  • Headache

  • Lightheadedness

  • Nausea

  • Numbness

  • No warning:
Sometimes seizures come with no warning


  Seizure symptoms

  • Sensory/Thought:

  • Black out

  • Confusion

  • Deafness/Sounds

  • Electric Shock Feeling

  • Loss of consciousness

  • Smell

  • Spacing out

  • Out of body experience

  • Visual loss or blurring
  
  
  
Emotional:

  • Fear/Panic
  
Physical: 

  • Chewing movements 

  • Convulsion 

  • Difficulty talking 

  • Drooling 

  • Eyelid fluttering

  • Eyes rolling up 

  • Falling down 

  • Foot stomping 

  • Hand waving

  • Inability to move 

  • Incontinence

  • Lip smacking 

  • Making sounds 

  • Shaking 

  • Staring 

  • Stiffening 

  • Swallowing

  • Sweating 

  • Teeth clenching/grinding

  • Tongue biting 

  • Tremors 

  • Twitching movements 

  • Breathing difficulty 

  • Heart racing

After-seizure symptoms (post-ictal)
  
Thought:  

  • Memory loss   

  • Writing difficulty
  
  
Emotional:
  

  • Confusion

  • Depression and sadness

  • Fear

  • Frustration

  • Shame/Embarrassment
  
Physical:

  • Bruising

  • Difficulty talking

  • Injuries

  • Sleeping

  • Exhaustion

  • Headache

  • Nausea

  • Pain

  • Thirst

  • Weakness

  • Urge to urinate/defecate
  
  
  
If you or someone you know has the symptoms listed above -- you are not alone. Below are personal stories by people who have either experienced or witnessed seizure symptoms.
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
Adapated from: Schachter SC, editor. Brainstorms: epilepsy in our words. New York: Raven Press; 1993; and Schachter SC, editor.The brainstorms companion: epilepsy in our view. New York: Raven Press; 1995.
  





 


 

 

Topic Editor: Steven C. Schachter, M.D.

 

 

Last Reviewed:12/15/06

 

 

 
 
 
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