How To Diagnose And Treat Seizures



A seizure disorder is diagnosed by a doctor when a person experienced at least two unprovoked seizures which happened at different instances. The diagnosis is made based on what the individual felt and what the eyewitnesses observed.

Indications that suggest a seizure consist of loss of consciousness, muscle spasms, incontinence, confusion and failure to focus and concentrate. But seizures bring about such symptoms infrequently than most people believe. A short loss of consciousness is probably just fainting or having syncope than a seizure.

Reports from an actual witness of the seizure can be very useful to doctors. A witness can tell exactly what really took place while people who have a seizure attack usually cannot do so. Medical professionals need to have a defined narrative which contains the following:

• How the incident began

• Whether it included unusual head or facial muscle spasms or stiffening, tongue biting, drooling or incontinence

• How long the episode lasted

• How fast the person regained focus and composure

Whatever an eyewitness can remember will be of great help to a physician, even though he may be too startled all throughout the seizure to retain information about it.
If a witness is capable, a seizure should be timed accurately using a watch. A seizure that lasted only up to a couple of minutes can look as if it went on for an hour or so.

After a seizure disorder is diagnosed, an appropriate treatment will be determined.

• Medications

At present, there is no real cure for epilepsy. Medicines do not treat epilepsy in the same sense that antibiotics can treat an infection. For most epileptics, the medications prevent seizures provided that they are taken on a regular basis.

Antiepileptic drugs effectively stop seizures in most people who take them regularly and as prescribed by their doctor.

If a patient decides to attempt withdrawal from medications and his doctor is informed, he should be made aware that the seizures may come back and must closely observe seizure safety measures. A number of people though, have an outstanding likelihood of remaining seizure free in the future without taking any medications.

• Surgery

Treating epilepsy through brain surgery can be successful but it is a complicated and complex procedure. It should be done by an experienced surgeon and staff. Most of the time, it is done at special medical institutions that take care of patients with seizures particularly.

After the surgery, a number of anti-seizure medications should be continued, generally for up to a couple of years. Subsequently, if no more seizures come about, the medications can be gradually withdrawn.

• Diet Modification

The ketogenic diet is generally efficient in children. It involves a meticulous set up and a firm observance.

A lot of children have better seizure control with this diet than with the usual treatments involving drugs and surgery even though it takes considerable dedication to make this method succeed. Several are capable of reducing or getting rid of their medications. However, medical management is important when using the ketogenic diet as a treatment.

Most of the time, for a specific type of seizure, there are just slight variations with the suitable treatments. The management preference commonly depends on other issues particular to each individual with seizure disorder.





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