If patients with epilepsy are treated with regular antiepileptic drugs, 70% of patients’ symptoms can be controlled, and another 50%-60% of patients can even be cured after 2-5 years of standardized treatment. If we encounter a small number of refractory epilepsy that is difficult to control with medication, surgical treatment or neuromodulation therapy, including repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation or peripheral nerve stimulation, can also be used to maximize the improvement of the patient’s condition. Epilepsy actually often does not affect intelligence, as in the case of the famous epileptic patient, the French emperor Napoleon, who often rode his war horse on the battlefield and fell off his horse because of seizures, but it did not affect his conquest of the south and the north and his conquest of the world. So as long as epilepsy patients effectively control epilepsy, they can completely live and work normally.