After your doctor asks you about your seizure symptoms, reads your EEG, and looks at your MRI report, if he or she tells you that you need surgery, then I think you are lucky among those who have epilepsy. Why? Surgery can remove the part of the brain tissue that produces epilepsy in limited epilepsy, which is usually called root removal, so that epilepsy can be completely cured, while diffuse epilepsy, not to mention root removal, because so far, the root of many diffuse epilepsy can not be found; and the reason why I say lucky is that after the doctor reads your data directly If they tell you that you need surgery, it usually means that we have found the location of your epileptic lesion and are quite sure of it, so they will directly ask you to prefer surgery. Experience tells us that although some of these cases can be temporarily controlled by medication, they can only reduce or alleviate the seizures, because the root of the disease is still there, and there is no medication that can dissolve the root of the disease. Nowadays, anti-epileptic drugs control epilepsy by inhibiting the discharge of brain cells, so the bad brain that is the root of the disease is always inside, and the root of the disease may be temporarily inhibited by the drugs, but the root of the disease is also constantly fighting with the drugs. The long-term war between the root of the disease and the drugs in your brain is bound to cause damage to the innocent brain, causing your memory and intelligence to decline, your mood to be poor, and social difficulties. So my advice is that when your doctor suggests surgery directly after reading your profile, you should make the brave and right choice to change your fate.