There are several categories of sheep epilepsy, what is sheep epilepsy

Updated on healthy 2024-05-12
9 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    Epilepsy is a disease that causes abnormal electrical discharges in the brain for a short period of time, and the types of epilepsy can be divided into three main categories, namely primary, secondary, and cryptogenic epilepsy.

    1. Primary epilepsy: also known as idiopathic epilepsy, epilepsy without organic lesions and with genetic predisposition. It is a specific group of epilepsy syndromes, and in children, it is often closely related to age, some are related to genetic factors, and the prognosis is good.

    2. Secondary epilepsy: or symptomatic epilepsy, also known as epilepsy with definite ** and organic brain lesions. There are many diseases that cause this type of epilepsy, mainly one is intracerebral disease, various encephalopathy, and the other is extracerebral disease, drug poisoning, etc.

    Many central nervous system or systemic disorders can cause epilepsy. The common causes of secondary epilepsy are birth trauma, intracranial infection, abnormal cerebral circulation, etc., such as sequelae of encephalitis, febrile seizures in children, etc., which can cause epilepsy.

    3. Cryptogenic epilepsy: Although the cause cannot be found after various current methods, epilepsy is the only symptom of the disease. However, with the advancement of science and technology, more cryptogenic epilepsy will be able to find out the cause of its cause.

    The above is what the experts introduced to the patients, hoping to bring some help to the patients. Experts also remind patients that after they find out that they are sick, they must go to a regular large hospital for detailed examination and diagnosis in time.

    In this way, the doctor customizes a suitable plan according to the actual situation of the patient, and the patient is active and rational in the use of drugs, and the epilepsy can be solved soon.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    Epilepsy is epilepsy.

    Distinguish between the main types: one division is epilepsy with partial or focal seizures and epilepsy with generalized seizures; Another division is between known epilepsy (symptomatic or secondary epilepsy) and unknown epilepsy (primary or cryptogenic epilepsy). Among them, most of the cases of surgical ** belong to secondary epilepsy, and there are different seizure manifestations according to different lesion sites

    1) Frontal lobe: generally the onset time is short, without psychiatric symptoms in the later stage of convulsions. Corresponding manifestations may be found in different cortical areas, such as automatism, autonomic symptoms, urinary incontinence, etc., in the cingulate gyrus; Impairment of consciousness in the prefrontal area, twisting, clonic seizures, etc.; The motor area may show simple partial seizures, language impairment, etc.

    2) Temporal lobe: the most common type of secondary epilepsy and the most common type in surgery at present. Most of them** and the almond hippocampus area on the medial temporal lobe often have aura manifestations before the attack, such as a rising feeling of stomach qi, palpitation, panic, hallucinations, etc., and most of them have automatism, and there are often sequelae symptoms such as cognitive impairment after the attack.

    3) Parietal lobe: simple sensory partial seizures are mostly local limb numbness and movement.

    The common seizure is the visual cortex origin, and the patient will have flashes of light, blackness and other manifestations before the seizure, which generally does not cause generalized seizures, but can spread to the parietal and temporal lobes.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    Some people may talk about discoloration as soon as they hear about sheep epilepsy, and think that it is a very terrible disease. Epilepsy is a complex neurological syndrome. Its irregular seizures not only make patients painful, we must have a correct understanding of it, and I will introduce to you what sheep epilepsy is.

    1.First, epilepsy, commonly known as "epilepsy" or "epilepsy", is a chronic disease in which neurons in the brain suddenly and abnormally discharge, resulting in transient brain dysfunction.

    According to the latest epidemiological data in China, the overall prevalence of epilepsy in China is 100,000 per year, and the prevalence of active epilepsy with seizures within 1 year is 100,000. It is estimated that there are about 9 million people with epilepsy in China, of which 500,6 million are active epilepsy.

    2.Second, it is characterized by recurrent seizures caused by abnormal firing of brain neurons.

    Epilepsy is one of the most common diseases of the nervous system, second only to stroke. The incidence of epilepsy is age-related. The prevalence is generally considered to be highest within 1 year of age, followed by 1 to 10 years of age.

    3.Third: According to the different causes of epilepsy, it can be divided into idiopathic epilepsy syndromes, symptomatic epilepsy syndromes and possible symptomatic epilepsy syndromes.

    In 2001, the International League Against Epilepsy proposed a new protocol that also defined or standardized a number of key terms, including reflex epilepsy syndromes, benign epilepsy syndromes, and epileptic encephalopathy.

    Precautions. I hope that the above understanding of sheep epilepsy will help you understand its symptoms, and if you find its symptoms, send it to the hospital as soon as possible**. I also hope that patients and their families will not have some misunderstandings about epilepsy, do not go to the doctor in a disorderly manner, and believe rumors.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    What is epilepsy? The folk so-called sheep epilepsy is the so-called epilepsy in modern medicine.

    There are two kinds of epilepsy, primary epilepsy with unknown causes, and secondary epilepsy, also known as symptomatic epilepsy, which is a seizure with a clear cause, such as tumor, trauma, cerebrovascular disease, inflammation, parasites, etc., with a definite cause of epileptic seizures. The diagnosis of epilepsy is a symptomatic diagnosis, and its clinical seizures include so-called grand mal seizures, petit mal seizures, absence seizures, and so on. It has a **internal medicine drug-based**, and some other auxiliaries**.

    If the indication for surgery and the effect of internal medicine ** are not good, surgery ** can be used.

    In short, it is a complex and targeted process, which must be carried out under the guidance of professional doctors and with targeted methods. Both internal medicine and surgery should be carried out under the guidance of professional physicians, and patience and long-term preparation are required. Some patients have an almost lifelong diagnosis, lifelong diagnosis**.

    Epilepsy is a common name for epilepsy, a encephalopathy syndrome caused by abnormally synchronized firing of neurons in the brain. The most common manifestation is that the person faints unconscious, the whole body has convulsions, which can be accompanied by foaming at the mouth, bluish complexion, trismus, eyes turned up, convulsions lasting generally 1 to 5 minutes, accompanied by urinary incontinence, tongue bite. It can also manifest as other forms, such as local limb tremors, psychiatric abnormalities, paresthesias, automatism, etc.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Epilepsy is an episodic temporary cranial nerve dysfunction caused by abnormal electrical discharges of neurons in the skull. The clinical manifestations include various types of seizures, the most common of which are upward turning of the eyes, rigid twitching of the limbs, foaming at the mouth, loss of consciousness, and incontinence. There are also atypical seizure symptoms such as falling, nodding and hugging, and losing consciousness.

    There are also paresthesias and sensory abnormalities, such as episodic pain in certain areas.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    Epilepsy, also known as epilepsy in medicine, is a chronic brain disease caused by a variety of **, characterized by recurrent, episodic and transient central nervous system dysfunction caused by excessive neuronal discharge. Seizures occur in any age, region, or population, but the incidence is higher in children and adolescents. Seizures have the common characteristics of abrupt stopping, transient and self-limiting, and the clinical manifestations of seizures are diverse, such as sensory, motor, autonomic, consciousness, emotional, memory, cognitive, and behavioral disorders.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Epilepsy (commonly known as "sheep epilepsy"), but the word "sheep" does not mean that "epilepsy" comes from sheep, but because the patient's cry during the seizure resembles a sheep, hence the name.

    Epilepsy is divided into two types: primary epilepsy and secondary epilepsy, and studies have found that the occurrence of the former may be related to genetic factors, while the occurrence of the latter is mostly caused by brain diseases (such as head trauma, cerebrovascular malformations, brain tumors, etc.), and some systemic diseases (such as hypoxia, uremia, hepatic encephalopathy, etc.).

    Seizures are affected by many factors, 1. Age: about 60-80% of epilepsy first occurs before the age of 20, and ** varies among different age groups; 2. Sleep and wake cycles; 3. Menstruation and endocrine: female epilepsy patients often have more or worse seizures in the premenstrual period; 4. Genetic factors:

    Seizures can be affected in several ways: (1) patients with primary epilepsy have a family history, and its prevalence is 6-10 times higher than that of the general population, which is caused by genetic factors that reduce the individual seizure threshold. (2) Genetic control of a certain hereditary disease is the cause of epilepsy, such as many hereditary diseases, as well as progressive myoclonus epilepsy. (3) Genetic factors are related to seizures.

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    International League Against Epilepsy (1981) Classification and clinical manifestations of seizures 1 Partial seizures (locally initiated seizures) Secondary to simple partial seizures (1) Simple partial seizures (without impaired consciousness) Secondary to complex partial seizures Motor symptoms. 2.Generalized seizures (bilaterally symmetrical seizures, with somatosensory or special sensory symptoms.

    No local symptoms at the beginning) Autonomic symptoms. (1) Absence seizures.

    Have psychiatric symptoms. (2) Myoclonus.

    2) Complex partial seizures (with impaired consciousness) (3) Clonic seizures are followed by simple partial seizures, followed by impaired consciousness. (4) Obsessive seizures are impaired at the beginning of consciousness. (5) Tonic-clonic seizuresa Only impaired consciousness.

    6) Atonic seizures.

    b Automatism. 3.Uncategorized.

    3) Partial seizures are secondary to generalized seizures.

  9. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    Epilepsy is a common name for epilepsy among ordinary people, called epilepsy in medical terminology, (if you are a non-medical person, it is still a little difficult to make a comprehensive understanding) (epilepsy) is a chronic disease of sudden abnormal discharge of brain neurons, resulting in transient brain dysfunction. Modern medicine believes that the causes of epilepsy can be divided into two categories: primary (functional) epilepsy and secondary (symptomatic) epilepsy.

    Clinical features. Epilepsy is a disease and syndrome characterized by intermittent dysfunction of the central nervous system caused by repeated sudden overfiring of neurons in the brain. It is a disorder of varying degrees of motor sensory, autonomic, consciousness and mental state that originates in the brain and acts backwards. This definition encapsulates the complexity of epilepsy symptoms and the two basic characteristics of epilepsy, namely recurrent and episodic.

    The so-called repetition means that after the first seizure, after a period of time, there will definitely be a second, third, or even multiple seizures. Even the most common seizures, if they occur only once, are not recurrent and cannot be diagnosed as epilepsy. Episodic refers to the sudden onset and abrupt cessation of symptoms.

    We may have seen patients who suddenly fall to the ground and have convulsions while walking or eating, and then return to normal after a while. There are also children with abdominal epilepsy who suddenly have severe abdominal pain, cry or fall to the ground, and continue to play after a few minutes or dozens of minutes. Both of these features must be present, no matter how complex the symptoms of epilepsy are.

    It is also an important basis for diagnosing epilepsy.

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