What to do about absence seizures? How are partial absence seizures caused?

Updated on healthy 2024-02-11
17 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Hello! Epilepsy is a disease, and seizures are a symptom, seizures are caused by abnormal electrical discharges caused by damage to brain neuronal cells, so if you want to completely control seizures, you must repair the damaged neuronal cells to balance the abnormal discharge, and completely eliminate seizures. A small percentage of refractory epilepsy may be an option for surgery**.

    It is important to understand that epilepsy is a treatable condition and that most people with epilepsy have a good prognosis. Practice has shown that most seizures can be reduced or alleviated with prompt and correct diagnosis and reasonable **. Many patients and their families are anxious, listen to media advertisements, go to the doctor when they are sick, and look for the so-called "ancestral secret recipe" everywhere and fall for deception.

    Some undergo inappropriate surgical procedures**, which do not relieve seizures but leave sequelae.

    The best** effect of epilepsy is to stop the seizures completely or control them as much as possible. At present, the common method is to control the excitability of brain cells by drugs, generally speaking, the frequency of seizures can be reduced, but taking the drug for too long will lead to memory loss, sluggishness, abnormal liver and kidney function, etc. Epilepsy is different from general brain diseases, and patients are advised to be timely** so as not to delay the optimal ** time.

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  2. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    Partial seizures of absence are caused by disruption in the transmission of nerves in our brain, because absence is associated with nerves.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    The cause of seizures is mainly due to epilepsy. Absence seizures are a clinical syndrome caused by an abnormal synchronous discharge of neurons in the brain, so the cause of this is an abnormal discharge from the electroencephalogram. The cause of absence seizures may be some diseases such as encephalitis, tumors, trauma, ischemia, etc.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    It is because of long-term poor work and rest, always staying up late, nervous disorders, resulting in loss of mind, very headache, and often unable to sleep.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    It is because the neurons in the computer cortex have some unusual electrical discharges, so the patient will have some loss of consciousness during the seizure.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    Suddenly, I will be stunned, my body will be uncoordinated, I will often be in a daze, sometimes I will forget something, and sometimes I will stop moving.

  7. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    The symptoms are that the mood is very unstable, the mood ups and downs are very large, and there will be some abnormal performances and behaviors, and at the same time, they will often be alone in a daze and so on.

  8. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    Typical absence seizures: also called petit mal seizures. EEG showed a regular and symmetrical 3-week combination of seconds and slow waves, and the background activity was normal.

    1. Consciousness disorder only: The symptoms are sudden onset and sudden cessation of consciousness disorder, which lasts for 5 to 30 seconds at a time. The breather stopped moving, unable to speak, and stared. Immediately after the pavilion, he was awake and had no memory of the seizure.

    2. Accompanied by a slight tremor: ditto, with limited tremor of the face, mouth or upper limbs for 3 weeks.

    3. Accompanied by no muscle tone component: accompanied by the fall of the head, trunk and upper limbs. Holding objects in the hand may fall, but only occasionally cause the patient to fall.

    4. Accompanied by muscle strengthening components: tonic spasm with certain muscle groups. The head is tilted back or to one side, and the back is arched back, which may cause a sudden backward movement.

    5. Accompanied by autonomic symptoms: accompanied by pallor, flushing, salivation, incontinence, etc.

    6. Accompanied by automatism: especially in special prolonged episodes, that is, status losseum.

    2 Atypical absence seizures: the onset and rest of consciousness disturbance are slower than those of typical patients, and the changes in muscle tone are more obvious. EEG shows slow and irregular spike-one slow waves or pointed slow waves with abnormal background activity.

    1. Myoclonus: sudden, short, rapid muscle contractions. It may be all over the body or may be confined to the face, torso, or limbs. May occur individually, but rapid repetition is common. EEG shows multiple spines and one slow wave, one spinous one slow wave, or one pointed slow wave.

    2. Clonic seizures: generalized repetitive paroxysmal seizures. Recovery is stronger and straightens a bout of spasms as fast. EEG shows activity, slow waves, and occasionally spikes and slow waves.

    3. The whole body enters strong tonic muscle spasm: the limbs should be extended, the head and eyes are deviated to one side, and it is often accompanied by autonomic symptoms such as paleopathy, flushing, pupil dilation, etc. Onset of strong suitability of the trunk results in angular reflexion. EEG showed a low-potential 10-week second wave with a gradual increase in amplitude.

  9. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    Symptoms are sudden onset and abrupt cessation of impaired consciousness, lasting 5 to 30 seconds at a time. The breather stopped moving, unable to speak, and stared. Immediately after the pavilion, he was awake and had no memory of the seizure. It can be in the Kunming Military Sea**.

  10. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    Absence seizures. Such seizures are more common in childhood and adolescence and have no aura. Clinical features include a brief loss of consciousness that begins abruptly and ends abruptly, interruption of ongoing activities during the seizure, binocular gaze, brief upward turning of the eyeballs, such as sudden immobility while walking, abrupt cessation or slowing down of speech, and abrupt disappearance of food after a few seconds of eating.

    Seizures may often be accompanied by mild clonus, atonic loss, rigidity, or automatism, or may manifest as a simple impairment of consciousness. It is thought that the basic mechanism of absence seizures is related to the abnormal oscillatory rhythm of the thalacortical circuit, which directly leads to bilaterally synchronized spinous and slow wave emission and absence seizures.

  11. Anonymous users2024-01-27

    Absence seizures are a very classic type of neurology seizures, which means that when the patient is doing something, such as studying, listening to lectures or eating, there will be a sudden stunned seizure, holding a pencil or chopsticks in his hand will fall to the ground, which can be relieved in a few seconds, and the patient can not recall the seizure at all, which is a typical absence seizure. It is generally seen in children, which is relatively common and can seriously affect the child's learning. Absence of patients for EEG examination, will find characteristic abnormal EEG waveforms, for this case, patients need to take anti-epileptic drugs in a timely manner, many patients after entering puberty, usually able to **.

  12. Anonymous users2024-01-26

    Absence petit mal seizures are also called classic petit mal seizures or simple petit mal seizures. It is another epilepsy disorder following tonic seizures. Petit mal absence seizures are more common in children and are mostly primary epilepsy.

    Patients generally have no organic brain damage, and few have personality and intellectual impairments. It is characterized by short, multiple episodes.

    Seizures are short-lived, lasting only one to a few seconds. There are no prodromal symptoms, and the patient suddenly loses consciousness during the attack, is dazed, does not function at rest, has no generalized muscle spasms, and usually does not collapse. The patient abruptly stops the work he is doing, the object in his hand falls, such as the dishes and chopsticks he holds during a meal, the conversation can be interrupted suddenly, the face can be pale, and there is no appearance of pretensions. Sometimes there are very small rhythmic twitches on the face, and sometimes there is a sudden breath holding, and you can see a tremor and a few drops of saliva from the corners of the mouth.

    Typical petit mal seizures can be repeated many times, but there can be dozens or even hundreds of seizures every day; It can be a simple small seizure, a major seizure, or some other type of seizure.

  13. Anonymous users2024-01-25

    Absence seizures are also known as petit mal seizures, which are also generalized seizures and are divided into typical absence and atypical absence seizures, which are very different.

    1. Typical absence seizures: This type of seizures are common in childhood and adolescence, generally stop before puberty, without any aura, and are clinically manifested as a brief loss of consciousness, which suddenly begins and ends abruptly, generally a few seconds to more than ten seconds.

    2. Atypical absence seizures: the onset and cessation of consciousness disorders are slower than those of typical seizures, and most patients have obvious changes in muscle tone, which is generally more common in patients with diffuse brain damage, and the prognosis is relatively poor.

  14. Anonymous users2024-01-24

    How can absence seizures be better and faster**? Many people don't know much about epilepsy and only have a preliminary understanding that seizures can make people convulsive. Epilepsy, absence seizures, also known as petit mal seizures, are often overlooked.

    In the process, many patients will ask how to get a better and faster absence seizure? Absence seizures, also known as absence seizures, are characterized by sudden interruption of mental activity, loss of consciousness, and may be accompanied by myoclonus or automatism in people with epilepsy. A few seconds to more than 10 seconds at a time.

    EEG showed 3 seconds of spikes or sharp slow wave synthesis.

    Epilepsy** is not determined by the size of the seizure, whether the epilepsy patient has a grand mal seizure or absence seizure, it is necessary to judge the severity of the epilepsy through a detailed examination, based on the results of the examination and the clinical experience of the specialist. Even if you have an absence seizure, an EEG is examined to determine the abnormality of the brain. How to choose the correct way is also to be determined according to the actual situation of epilepsy patients after examination.

    It is not determined by the size of the symptoms of the seizure.

    According to the development of current medicine, it is not difficult to deal with epilepsy, as long as you choose a regular big hospital and a regular way, whether it is a grand mal seizure or an absence seizure, you can get a good **, so epilepsy patients should not worry that only absence seizures can get a good **. This is a misunderstanding.

  15. Anonymous users2024-01-23

    【Clinical manifestations】Absence is a non-convulsive seizure, which is clinically manifested as sudden impairment of consciousness, ongoing voluntary activities and cessation of speech, blank staring of both eyes, sluggish expression, and generally does not fall. The seizure lasts for a few seconds to tens of seconds, and then it suddenly recovers, continuing the movements that were carried out before the seizure. There is no postictal impairment of consciousness.

    People are often unaware that they have experienced a seizure or only feel a blank space in their mind. Seizures occur in an awake state. Most of the typical absence seizures are frequent, ranging from several to dozens or even hundreds of times a day.

    Some transient episodes have only transient mild cognitive impairment that requires very close observation or the use of special psychological tests. EEG monitoring showed that the emission of a fully conductive 3Hz spike and slow wave lasted for more than 3 seconds, which could cause absence seizures. Absence seizures can occur spontaneously or be triggered by certain factors, which tend to be constant in the same patient.

    Possible predisposing factors include emotional factors, lack of attention, lack of intellectual activity, decreased levels of arousal, drowsiness, the process of waking from sleep, hypoglycemia, or other metabolic abnormalities. Seizures generally do not occur when the child is intellectually active, awake, and attentive. Hyperventilation is very sensitive and effective in inducing absence seizures, and if the child can complete a sufficient depth of hyperventilation, it can generally induce typical EEG and clinical seizures.

    Unqualified seizures that cannot be provoked by hyperventilation should call into question the diagnosis of typical absence seizures. Based on video EEG analysis of a large number of absence seizures, typical absence seizures are divided into 6 subtypes, and more than one subtype can occur in the same seizure in the same patient. On the one hand, further classification enriches the detailed understanding of the symptomatology of absence seizures and helps in differential diagnosis, and on the other hand, the pathogenesis, response to ** and prognosis of different subtypes may be different.

    With the development of diagnostic monitoring technology, there may be new understanding of this in the future.

  16. Anonymous users2024-01-22

    If you're a poet, you can use a little bit of that to really replenish your brain. Or if you take some sedative medicine, it can relieve it, and sometimes she doesn't say **. If you have a nervous seizure, is it a nerve spasm?

    Nerve spasm is not easy to treat! If you have eczema, you are prone to mental illness. If your best bet is to go to a psychiatric hospital, you can go and have a look.

    Go to the psychiatric department and he will prescribe some sedative drugs for you, which can control it. I didn't say it, if you are sick, you have to go to the hospital, or what are you doing if the hospital opens a hospital, what are you talking about here?

  17. Anonymous users2024-01-21

    Typical absence seizures are a type of epilepsy that currently controls seizures of epilepsy. A large proportion of patients rely on anti-epileptic drugs. The remainder is administered by anti-epileptic drugs**.

    It really didn't work. After regular diagnosis and treatment of several drugs, it is not controlled. It may eventually become intractable epilepsy or refractory epilepsy.

    Some patients require surgery**. Not all patients with intractable epilepsy are candidates for surgical care. In general, there are organic lesions in the brain in the early examination.

    This is what we call a situation like meningitis. Only such people can perform surgery**. Of course, not all surgical treatments are good.

    Because the craniotomy itself is a secondary injury. So the ** rate in the later stage is very high! Good luck soon**.

    Suggestion: Current seizure control. A large proportion of patients rely on anti-epileptic drugs.

    The remainder is administered by anti-epileptic drugs**. It really didn't work. After regular diagnosis and treatment of several drugs, it is not controlled.

    It may eventually become intractable epilepsy or refractory epilepsy. Some patients require surgery**. Not all patients with intractable epilepsy are candidates for surgical care.

    In general, there are organic lesions in the brain in the early examination. This is what we call a situation like meningitis. Only such people can perform surgery**.

    Of course, not all surgical treatments are good. Because the craniotomy itself is a secondary injury. So the ** rate in the later stage is very high!

    Good luck soon**.

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