Can Epilepsy Patients Be Cured Many epilepsy patients often prefer surgical treatment of epilepsy when their physical condition permits. Clinically, surgical treatment of epilepsy is mainly based on the removal of epileptogenic foci, blocking the conduction of epileptic pathways, and increasing the epilepsy threshold, and the success rate of epilepsy surgery is currently increasing. So, can patients with epilepsy be cured? Can patients with epilepsy be cured? The epilepsy is not an incurable disease, but a chronic neurological disease that extends over several years. Although it is difficult to treat, about 60% of epilepsy patients can be cured with timely and reasonable treatment, while about 20% of patients can control their seizures with medication, and only 15%-20% of epilepsy patients have poor treatment results. Can patients with epilepsy be cured? For a long time, people have believed that epilepsy is drug-free, and many patients therefore do not use formal and systematic treatment methods, making some patients who could have been cured lose the best time for treatment. The fact that some patients believe in folk remedies and repeatedly use various prescriptions for treatment also misses the time for timely treatment, adding to the difficulty of early recovery. In general, patients with epilepsy take medication for 3 to 5 years. After long-term, systematic medication, if the symptoms are well controlled, the medication can be reduced or discontinued. If the symptoms are well controlled, the medication can be reduced or discontinued. If there are no seizures within 3 years of stopping the medication, the patient with epilepsy can be determined to be clinically cured. Patients who are cured should not be blindly optimistic. Cure does not mean no recurrence, so patients should maintain emotional stability, happy mood, regular living and eating, and should pay attention to prevent triggering factors in daily life, such as overexertion, lack of sleep, and excessive alcohol consumption, to avoid recurrence of epilepsy.