Seizures


What Are The Two Main Types Of Seizures?

Seizures indicate that an individual or an animal is having a brain problem. This condition takes place when the brain has a rapid, unusual electrical activity. Contrary to what most of us know, seizures don’t always result in convulsions. They come in many types and some display very mild symptoms. Seizures are classified into two main categories – partial seizures and generalized seizures.

Partial Seizures
In this kind of seizure, the electrical disturbance takes place only in a specific part or one side of the brain. It is further categorized into simple partial seizures and complex partial seizures. In the former type of partial seizure, the person is still conscious while in the latter type, patient’s consciousness is either lost or impaired.

Such seizures may intensify and may lead to a generalized seizure. These are the most common kind of seizure that individuals having epilepsy experience. During partial seizure attacks, a person may display almost any movement, as well as sensory and emotional symptoms. Convoluted auditory and visual hallucinations can also be experienced.

Generalized Seizures
This type of seizure affects both sides of the brain, right from the moment when the seizure begins. Generalized seizures can cause impaired or loss of consciousness, either temporarily or for a longer period. These are subdivided into major types such as:

• Absence seizures – this kind of seizure causes lapses in the person’s consciousness that suddenly begin and don’t last long. While they occur without a warning, such seizures don’t have after-effects. Absence seizures are commonly observed in children that are 4 to 12 years old.

• Tonic clonic seizures – among the types of generalized seizures, these are the best known and are the most common. Also known as grand mal seizures, they start with tonic phase, which is characterized by stiffening of the limbs, then proceed to the clonic phase wherein jerking of the face and the limbs is experienced.

• Myoclonic seizures – these are sudden, brief muscle contractions which simultaneously take place on both sides of the body. There are times when such seizures affect only a foot or one arm. Most of the time you won’t recognize these not as seizures but as rapid clumsiness or jerks.

• Atonic seizures – also called drop attacks, akinetic, or astatic seizures, such condition causes impulsive loss of the person’s muscle tone. Atonic seizures are characterized by loss of posture, head drops, and immediate collapse. Since they happen so fast and without a warning, the one experiencing such seizures may fall with force, resulting in face and head injuries.

A person may also experience provoked or single seizure which happens when there are some conditions that upset the brain or deprive it with fuel or oxygen. Among the factors that cause this non-epileptic seizure are certain drugs, injuries, sleep deprivation, fever, infections, low oxygen and sugar level in the blood, and abnormal heart rhythms. Seizures are also occasionally caused by video games, recurring sounds, flashing lights, and even by touching some body parts. The disorder caused by these factors is named reflex epilepsy.

 

 

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Seizures


Absence Seizures – A Different Kind Of Seizure

... seizure include staring into space without any unusual movements which may appear like the patient is presently 'disconnected', smacking of the lips, chewing motions, fluttering of the eyelids, small hand movements. Some attacks of absence seizures can be so brief, they are barely noticeable. These types, ... 

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Special Types Of Seizures

... describe whether the symptoms shown by the patient in experiment are similar with those happening in actual attacks. A diagnosis can be completed once all seizure type conditions are ruled out and when the condition presented by the patient confirms the common symptoms seen among psychogenic seizure patients. ... 

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The Most Common Causes Of Seizures

... which resulted from a stimulus like lack of oxygen in the brain is called a provoked seizure and accordingly, is called a non-epileptic seizure. This may be experienced by a person without a seizure disorder history. Most of the time, the causes of provoked seizures include sleep deprivation, head injury ... 

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Symptoms Of Seizure

... represent a particular type of seizure but may also be present in all types of seizures. The final stage of seizure is not without symptoms. Prolonged loss of consciousness, resting, memory loss, confusion, depression, and weakness may be experienced depending on the type of seizure affecting the patient. ... 

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Understanding The Stages Of A Seizure

... Apilepsia partialis continua, an extremely rare type of seizure, may appear like a seizure of a localized area of the body that continues for an extended period of time. Tonic-clonic seizure or grand mal, on the other hand, produces an entire spectrum of familiar seizure symptoms. In tonic-clonic seizure, ... 

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