Epilepsy symptoms

  Epilepsy, commonly known as crohn’s disease, is a clinical syndrome caused by highly synchronized abnormal discharges of neurons in the brain from a variety of causes. As a persistent disease of the nervous system, epileptic symptom seizures are recurrent, transient, and stereotyped, and their symptoms vary during seizures. It can also be manifested as headache type, abdominal pain type or syncope type of autonomic seizures.  The second, complex partial seizures: refers to patients with seizures with varying degrees of blurred consciousness and obvious thinking, perception and movement disorder seizures, also known as psychomotor seizures.  The third, generalized seizure: refers to the loss of consciousness at the beginning of the patient’s seizure, followed by body tonic, clonic jerking seizures, often accompanied by facial cyanosis, urinary incontinence, tongue bite, foaming at the mouth or bloody foam, dilated pupils and other manifestations. In some patients, the seizures are characterized by sudden interruption of mental activity, loss of consciousness, myoclonus or spontaneous seizures, and a few seconds to more than 10 seconds.  Therefore, the symptoms of epilepsy are mainly in the above categories, but can cause great damage to the patient’s bodily functions, and even threaten the patient’s life. If the above-mentioned symptoms occur, it is important to seek timely medical attention and early treatment in order to maintain or restore their original physiological and social functional status.