Most epilepsies require long-term medication, and medication varies with the type of epilepsy, so there is no such thing as a single drug that can cure epilepsy. Epilepsy is a clinical syndrome caused by highly synchronized abnormal discharges of neurons in the brain due to multiple causes. Epilepsy treatment is based on medication, and commonly used drugs include sodium valproate, lamotrigine, levetiracetam, ethosuximide, phenytoin sodium, carbamazepine, and so on. Different types of epileptic seizures, the use of different drugs, such as children’s partial seizures, preferred oxcarbazepine; adult partial seizures, preferred carbamazepine; disoriented seizures, preferred ethosuximide, lamotrigine, sodium valproate and so on. Some idiopathic epilepsy develops at a certain age and can be cured on its own with age, such as benign childhood epilepsy with central-temporal spikes. About 1/3 or so of patients with epilepsy can achieve long-term remission with a period of monotherapy, or even without treatment in a small percentage of patients. Another about 1/3 of patients can be effectively treated with monotherapy or a reasonable multi-drug combination to control seizures. There are still about 30% of patients with prolonged seizures and refractory epilepsy. When you suffer from epilepsy, you should seek medical treatment in time, and your doctor will choose the most appropriate medication according to the type of epilepsy.