Neonates normally present with mobile partial seizures, and febrile convulsions are common from 6 months to 5 years of age. Benign central-temporal spike-wave focal epilepsy in children tends to begin at 4-10 years of age and resolves spontaneously after adolescence. Adulthood is mostly characterized by partial seizures or secondary generalized seizures. The first seizures in infancy are mostly organic brain disease, especially in the prenatal period, and the subsequent seizures are often primary until the age of 20. In Chinese medicine, epilepsy is considered to be a phlegm disorder. The brain is the clearest and purest internal organ, which is the gathering of true qi, maintains the meridians, coordinates inside and outside, and is the main source of energy. If the brain is clear, it is clear and presided over; the brain is the marrow sea, where the water and grain essence and kidney essence are stored. The clear spirit of the internal organs like quietness and evil movement and disturbance, easy to deficiency and easy to real, therefore, the pathological basis of the God injury and orifice closure. Clear orifices are disturbed. If the spirit is disturbed, the spirit is out of control, and the spirit is scattered, then it will faint and convulse; if the medulla is not filled, the spirit is not nourished, and the brain is deprived of the spirit, resulting in trance and restlessness and dullness. Basic precautions for epilepsy: seizures cannot be restricted. When the patient is convulsing, bystanders should not press or bend their bodies with force. Do not try to put anything in the patient’s mouth, such as placing wooden chopsticks, spoons, etc. Some family members fear that the patient will bite his tongue during a seizure and place their fingers between the patient’s teeth in an emergency, which is absolutely forbidden. Protect the patient’s head with a soft cushion. After the seizure is over, gently place the patient in a good recovery position to improve breathing. The rescuer should wait until the patient has fully recovered before leaving. Do not give the patient anything to eat or drink until he or she has fully recovered. Do not take any steps to try to wake the patient.