Early symptoms of pediatric epilepsy

Epilepsy, commonly known as crohn’s disease, is a clinical syndrome caused by highly synchronized abnormal discharges of neurons in the brain due to multiple causes. The disease is a persistent disorder of the nervous system, most of which have no typical symptoms and require a combination of ancillary tests and clinical symptoms for diagnosis, and are generally difficult to detect early. Pediatric patients need to be observed more carefully because of their poor expressive abilities. Seizure symptoms are recurrent, transient, and stereotypical, and the performance of seizures varies, mainly in the following categories: I. Simple partial seizures: are seizures in which the patient’s consciousness is clear, manifested as tonic and jerking seizures of one side of the limb, or abnormal seizure symptoms of sensations such as localized numbness or pins and needles in the body, lasting for a short time. It can also be a headache type, abdominal pain type or syncope type of autonomic seizures. The patient’s seizures have different degrees of blurred consciousness and obvious thinking, perception and movement disorder seizures, also known as psychomotor seizures. The patient has loss of consciousness at the beginning of the seizure, followed by tonic and clonic seizures, often accompanied by bruising, tongue bite, urinary incontinence, foaming at the mouth or blood froth, dilated pupils, etc. This is a special form of generalized seizure, which is characterized by sudden interruption of mental activity, loss of consciousness, myoclonus or spontaneity, and a seizure lasting from a few seconds to more than ten seconds. In conclusion, the symptoms of epilepsy are diverse, but most are difficult to detect early and cannot be diagnosed by symptoms alone. Seizures can also cause a lot of damage to the patient’s body functions and even threaten the patient’s life. Therefore, it is important to seek medical examination in a timely manner if any of the above-mentioned symptoms occur, in order to maintain or restore their original state of physical and social functioning.