There are no specific statistics on the rate of self-resolution in primary epilepsy, and spontaneous remission rates in epilepsy have been reported in the literature to range from 2% to 32%. Only some primary epilepsies can be self-resolving; most primary epilepsies are not self-resolving.
In clinical practice, a very small percentage of children with primary epilepsy may be able to recover spontaneously without systematic treatment as they get older and their body functions strengthen. This type of primary epilepsy is usually mild, and seizures are often transient, lasting only a few seconds or a few dozen seconds before resolving, but this is rare.
Most children with primary epilepsy cannot recover on their own, and must actively receive systematic antiepileptic medication, which includes: phenytoin sodium, carbamazepine, sodium valproate, phenobarbital, and so on.
In addition, the above drugs must be taken under the guidance of a specialist, and unauthorized application is prohibited.