How the fingers react during a seizure

Involuntary twitching of the fingers, sensory abnormalities, automatisms, and pause in finger movements can occur during a seizure.
1. Involuntary twitching of the fingers: abnormal movements often start locally, and the twitching develops gradually from the fingers to the wrist, elbow, shoulder, corner of the mouth, and face, and patients with severe seizures may experience transient paralysis of the limbs after the twitching.
2. Abnormal finger sensation: numbness and pins and needles sensation may appear in the fingers.
3. Automatisms: patients with consciousness disorders on the basis of involuntary finger movements.
4. movement pause: prepubescent children with epileptic apoplexy seizures are unconscious, unable to call out, and the original movements of the fingers stop, with only some simple random movements.
If the patient has epileptic symptoms, the patient needs to be protected from falling, biting the tongue, etc., and should be sent to the hospital for further treatment.