What’s wrong with dizziness in epilepsy?

Dizziness in patients with epilepsy may be caused by seizures, drug stimulation, and non-epileptic conditions. 1. Seizures: people with epilepsy may have symptoms of dizziness aura before the disease in a seizure. During a seizure, brain cells are stimulated, resulting in a lack of oxygen to the brain and dizziness. The patient may also be accompanied by a series of symptoms such as blurred consciousness, foaming at the mouth and twitching of the limbs. 2. Drug stimulation: epilepsy patients need to take drugs during treatment, some epilepsy drugs may cause dizziness and headache and other side effects, such as sodium phenytoin, sodium valproate, benzodiazepine, ethylsuccinate, etc., and a few patients may also have ataxia, loss of appetite and other manifestations. 3. Non-epilepsy: dizziness in epilepsy patients may also be caused by non-epilepsy diseases such as hypoglycemia, hypotension, anemia, cervical spondylosis, cerebrovascular disease, etc. At this time, we should actively treat the primary disease in order to improve the symptoms. Epileptic patients with dizziness symptoms should pay attention, clarify the cause, and actively seek medical treatment in order to control the symptoms and improve the condition.