Epilepsy, commonly known as “sheep epilepsy”, “lamb wind”, “goat horns”. Epilepsy is a chronic syndrome of the brain characterized by transient central nervous system malfunctions caused by abnormal neuronal discharges in the brain, with the characteristics of sudden onset and recurrent seizures. Abnormal neuronal discharge in the cerebral cortex is the pathological basis of various seizures, and any pathogenic factor that causes abnormal neuronal discharge in the brain can induce epilepsy. Depending on the site of lesion involvement, the clinical manifestations can be motor, sensory, consciousness, behavioral, and autonomic disorders of varying degrees. Epileptic seizures, on the other hand, refer to simple sensory, motor, and psychomotor seizures, or to each seizure and the brief course of each, and the patient may have one or more epileptic seizures simultaneously. A single epileptic seizure can also be caused by cold, fever, electrolyte imbalance, drug overdose, prolonged alcohol withdrawal, and sleep deprivation in normal individuals, but cannot be diagnosed as epilepsy. Epilepsy can be classified as epilepsy (basically similar to grand mal seizure) and headache in Chinese medicine according to its clinical manifestations because of its complex clinical manifestations.