There is no difference between epilepsy and sheep epilepsy; they are two different names for the same disease. Epilepsy is a disease with a high clinical incidence. It is a chronic disease of the brain with recurrent seizures, mainly caused by abnormal discharges of neurons in the brain, with recurrent seizure characteristics and transient characteristics. Epilepsy may have triggering factors, and many patients are prone to have seizures when they are emotionally excited, stimulated by sound or light, or when they are tired or poorly rested. Secondary epilepsy mainly refers to seizures secondary to brain factors, while the cause of primary epilepsy is not very clear, but both are mainly controlled by medication to reduce the frequency of seizures in patients, and if patients have more than two seizures in six months, antiepileptic drugs should be used.