Sudden generalized convulsions can first be seen in epileptic seizures, when the person has a loss of consciousness, generalized convulsions, manifested as upper limb flexion, lower limb extension, and in severe cases, the patient can have closed teeth and foaming at the mouth. For acute seizures, the patient should be given seizure control, and drugs such as diazepam or sodium valproate injection can be applied intravenously during the acute period. Sudden generalized convulsions in people can also be seen in cardiogenic diseases, such as As seizures, which lead to sudden loss of consciousness and generalized convulsions due to interruption of blood supply to the coronary arteries of the heart, and patients should be given immediate resuscitation and even defibrillation and other treatment options. There are also people with sudden generalized convulsions, which can also be clinically seen in hysterical seizures, mostly in young and middle-aged women, who can have seizures similar to epilepsy after getting angry, but the patient is conscious and the upper and lower limbs are mostly straightened as the main manifestation.