Providing detailed information to the doctor during the epilepsy consultation will help the doctor make a correct diagnosis and develop a reasonable treatment plan. 1. Present medical history: 1. Time, performance, and characteristics of the first seizure; are the seizures recurrent? Is the form of each seizure the same? Are there any precipitating factors? 2. Seizure details and related information: ① How did the seizure look like? ② Is there any premonition or aura before the seizure? ③ How long did each seizure last before it ended? ④ How long after the seizure has ended before the patient regains full consciousness? ⑤ How often do seizures occur? (6) What time of day, day or night, awake or asleep, does the seizure occur? 3. What antiepileptic drugs are you currently taking? What are the specific dosage and usage? 4. What medications have you taken in the past? 5. Have any past or current medications caused any side effects in the patient? If so, what are they? 6. Has the patient’s daily life, studies, or relationships been affected in any way by the seizures? 7. For patients with epilepsy, have they had any relevant examinations, such as EEG, CT, MRI, PETCT scan, it is best to bring relevant imaging data. 2. Past history: what diseases have been suffered from before the onset, such as encephalitis, febrile convulsions, traumatic brain injury, carbon monoxide poisoning, cerebrovascular disease, etc. 3. Personal history: Are there certain factors that may lead to epilepsy, such as the mother’s history of infection, toxic or radiation exposure during pregnancy that may cause adverse effects on fetal development, any perinatal asphyxia, hypoxia, birth injuries, severe jaundice, intracranial infections, whether cesarean section was performed due to obstructed labor, and how does the subsequent intellectual and motor development compare with that of the same age group? 4. Family history: Are there other people in the family who have epilepsy?