[Home]Seizure

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Seizures (or convulsions) are temporary alterations in brain functions due to abnormal electrical activity of a group of brain cells that present with apparent clinical symptoms and findings. So, an isolated abnormal electrical activity recorded by an electroencephalography? examination without a clinical presentation is not called a seizure. Seizure is usually a sudden and involuntary contraction of a group of muscles. However, a seizure can also be as subtle as marching numbness of a part of body, a brief loss of memory, sparkling of flashes, sniffing an unpleasant odor, a strange epigastric sensation or a sensation of fear. Therefore, it is traditional to classify the seizures as motor, sensory, autonomic, emotional and cognitive.

Seizure types are:

It is still disputable whether a [febrile seizure]? has to be regarded as an epileptic disorder or not. In general, a patient with two or more episodes of seizures is accepted to have the disease of epilepsy?. So, seizure is the name of a symptom and epilepsy is the name of a disease.

Major causes of seizures are head trauma, infection, tumor and metabolic alterations (e.g. low or high blood glucose levels). Many seizures are due to unknown reasons.


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Last edited May 19, 2001 4:00 am by ErdemTuzun (diff)
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