There are many types of epilepsy, and different types are treated differently, so it is especially critical for parents to describe their condition. For example, the age of onset, frequency of seizures, and the presence of aura. The performance of the seizure: which side of the head, which side of the eyes to gaze at, whether the limbs twitch, and if so, whether the twitching is the same on both sides. What is the posture of the limbs, and is there any stagnation in a very specific posture without moving. Is the patient repeatedly smacking his lips, swallowing, rubbing his hands, etc.? Seizure time: Are the seizures often during wakefulness or sleep, and are they more frequent when just asleep or almost awake. Seizure form: The form of seizure is also an important basis for diagnosing epilepsy. The same patient’s seizures do not change from one pattern to another. Although the number of seizures is sometimes high and sometimes low, the form of each seizure is basically the same. What kind of disease have you had in the past: pay special attention to whether you have had encephalitis and febrile convulsions during the perinatal period and at birth. As well as any history of drug allergies, family epilepsy patients, etc. Finally, remember to bring the original data. Mainly include EEG, laboratory tests and records of previous visits to the doctor, etc. Do not just bring the result report forms.