Some children with epilepsy have no early symptoms, but others may experience symptoms such as sensory, motor, and psychiatric abnormalities before a seizure, such as epigastric discomfort and vertigo.
Epilepsy tends to occur suddenly, and in most children with epilepsy, there are usually no early symptoms. However, for some secondary epileptic seizures, aura symptoms may appear at a certain moment, such as feeling discomfort in the epigastrium, vertigo, palpitations, etc., motor activity such as localized twitching of the body, and psychogenicity such as inexplicable fear and a sense of unreality. Usually the symptoms are extremely brief and cannot even be recalled.
Usually epilepsy returns to normal after a short duration, and patients do not differ from normal healthy people in the interval between seizures.
When a child is diagnosed with epilepsy, parents should adjust their mindset and actively cooperate with the doctor in treating the child in order to control the condition.