About Epilepsy

 

Neurosupport Centre
Norton Street
Liverpool
L3 8LR

Tel: 0151 298 2666
Fax: 0151 298 2333


epilepsy@mrea.demon.co.uk

Reg. Charity No: 504366

 


It's as common as diabetes and a medical condition like asthma, so why is so little known about epilepsy? With as many as one in 130 people affected, epilepsy is the most common neurological disorder
in the UK.

Many of you reading this will have epilepsy yourselves, or will have family members, friends, work colleagues or neighbours who have epilepsy.

This section aims to give you the basic facts - if you would like to know more, please contact Mersey Region Epilepsy Association
(details at the top of this page).

Who has epilepsy?
What is epilepsy?
What causes epilepsy?
How is epilepsy diagnosed?

Recognising epilepsy

Generalised seizures

Partial seizures
Secondarily Generalised seizures



 

Q. Who has epilepsy?

Epilepsy can affect anyone at any time, although it is often diagnosed before the age of 20 or after 60. It can affect people of all ages, races, social classes and ability groups. Most people with epilepsy do not have the condition for the whole of their lives, particularly those whose epilepsy develops in childhood.

Unless someone is having a seizure it is impossible to tell someone has epilepsy unless you are told.

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Q. What is epilepsy?

Epilepsy is the tendency to have recurrent seizures, which tend to recur spontaneously. These seizures occur when there is a temporary disturbance in the brain and the signals it sends to the body become mixed up, rather like an electrical storm in the brain. What happens during a seizure depends on which part of the brain the 'storm' is occurring. Different seizure types are outlined later in this section - people with epilepsy can have one type, or more than one type.

Up to 80% of people with epilepsy don't have seizures - they are controlled through taking medication.

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Q. What causes epilepsy?

For most people, there is no known cause for their epilepsy - this is referred to as cryptogenic epilepsy. However, in some people with epilepsy, the cause is more certain, and the condition develops as a result of damage to the brain, for example, from injury, birth trauma, or stroke. This is known as symptomatic epilepsy. All our brains have the capacity to produce a seizure in certain circumstances. Most brains won't do this unless encouraged, and so are said to have a 'high seizure threshold'. Others have a low threshold and people with cryptogenic epilepsy have a lower resistance to seizures. In the case of epilepsy arising from injury or illness- symptomatic epilepsy - the existing seizure threshold may be lowered.

People are more than a medical condition - the seizures are epileptic, not the person.

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Q. How is epilepsy diagnosed?

Diagnosis is based on events and there is no one medical test that can 'prove' that a person has epilepsy. Tests such as an EEG (electroencephalogram) can pick up on abnormal electrical activity in the brain, but an EEG is not usually grounds enough alone for a diagnosis. These tests can, though, help to find out the seizure type, identify any underlying cause and indicate appropriate treatment.
Most cases of epilepsy are diagnosed through witnessed accounts of seizures and through descriptions of what happened before, during and after, by both the person suspected of having epilepsy, and the person who was with them at the time. To be diagnosed with having epilepsy, the person must usually have recurrent attacks - one is not enough to constitute a diagnosis.
Once diagnosis has been confirmed, the person will be offered anti-epileptic medication which is designed to stop them from having seizures altogether, or reduce the amount of seizures they have.

One in 20 people has a seizure at some time in their lives

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RECOGNISING EPILEPSY

There are many different types of seizures, and only some involve losing consciousness. Some seizures, known as generalised seizures, affect the whole brain, while others, called partial seizures, affect only part of the brain.
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Generalised seizures

In these types of seizure the whole brain is affected by an abnormal electrical disturbance and the person becomes unconscious of surroundings. The following are some examples of generalised seizures.

tonic-clonic seizures
These used to be known as "grand mal" seizures. The seizure usually starts with a cry and a loss of consciousness with the person falling to the ground. A 'tonic' or stiff phase then leads to a 'clonic' or twitching phase. Finally there may be confusion, often followed by sleep. In addition to the very obvious convulsive movements, an observer may see the lips turn blue and if the tongue has been bitten blood may trickle from the mouth with frothy saliva. It is possible, but by no means always the case, that the person could be incontinent of urine or in rare cases, doubly incontinent.
 
tonic seizures
These seizures are quite dramatic. The muscles stiffen and, if standing up, the person will fall heavily to the floor, often receiving injury to the head. There is no jerking.

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atonic seizures
The muscle tone is lost causing the person to flop and fall to the ground. Sometimes referred to as "Drop Attacks" or astatic seizures, these can also be quite dramatic. The person falls heavily to the ground and although recovery is swift the result is often head or facial injury.
 
clonic seizures
In these seizures the muscles contract and relax continuously causing the person having the seizure to twitch and jerk repeatedly.
 
myoclonic seizures
"Myo" means muscle and "clonic" means jerk. When myoclonic seizures occur the muscles jerk rather as if the person has had some sort of electric shock.
Seizures usually occur shortly after waking or before retiring to bed when the person is tired. There is a loss of consciousness but it is hardly noticeable because the period is so brief.
 
absence seizures
These relatively rare seizures are usually confined to children and are sometimes referred to as "petit mal". They occur suddenly, provoking a brief trance-like state. Affected children stare blankly into space and their failure to respond when they are spoken to often results in them getting told off in school for not paying attention.
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Partial seizures

Only one part of the body is affected by these seizures since the abnormal activity of the brain is localised. Consciousness may be impaired.

 They are subdivided into two types - simple partial seizures and complex partial seizures.
 
simple partial seizures
These seizures are again subdivided into two main categories - focal motor seizures and focal sensory seizures. There is no impairment of consciousness.
 
focal motor seizures
These cause movement of the limbs, head or neck and they originate in the frontal lobes of the brain. If the seizure is in the right frontal lobe then the seizure movement is produced on the left hand side of the body and vice versa. Seizures originating in the frontal lobe can also involve an interruption in speech.

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focal sensory seizures
These seizures originate in the parietal lobes of the brain, producing physical sensations such as tingling or unnatural warmth. If the seizure is in the right parietal lobe of the brain it will produce a tingling or warmth on the left hand side of the body and vice versa.
 
complex partial seizures
These seizures usually originate in the temporal lobes of the brain and are non-convulsive in nature. They differ from simple partial seizures because they produce impaired or altered consciousness. This type of Epilepsy is sometimes called Temporal Lobe Epilepsy (TLE).
 
The seizures often commence with a simple partial seizure (called an aura) in which those experiencing the seizure become disorientated but still aware of what is going on. They may then go on to unknowingly pluck at clothing or smack lips and perhaps wander about aimlessly. Their behaviour is seen to be out of character.


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Secondarily Generalised Siezures

It is possible for someone who has had a partial seizure to then go straight into a generalised seizure. In these cases, the generalised seizure is known as a secondarily generalised seizure and it is usually atonic, tonic, clonic or tonic-clonic.
 
status epilepticus

This phrase is used to describe a situation when a seizure is prolonged or when there is a series of seizures during which the person does not regain consciousness. It is a medical emergency which needs active treatment by a doctor in order to stimulate the brain back to normality.

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Where can I get further information?


Mersey Region Epilepsy Association offers free support and information to people with epilepsy, their families and carers, across Merseyside and Cheshire.
 
     

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