About Epilepsy
 
Epilepsy is a disorder involving sudden bursts of excess energy in the brain.  The normally smooth function of the brain is disturbed by these excessive bursts of energy (a little bit like a brief electrical storm in the brain) and a seizure occurs.
 
Facts
 
 
  • anyone can develop epilepsy at any age, however, the peak ages of onset are at the extremes of life (in the first decade and after age 65)
  • many children will outgrow seizures
  • people with epilepsy have the same range of intelligence as the general population
  • it is not contagious, and is rarely fatal
  •  
    Causes
     
    There is no single cause of epilepsy.  The following are possible causes:
     
     

  • head injury
  • brain tumor
  • trauma before, during and after birth
  • infections and poisons affecting the brain
  • seizure tendency may be inherited in a small percentage of cases
  • in 50% of cases the cause is unknown
  •  
    Treatment
     
    Treatment is usually with antiseizure medication.
     
     

  • In 75% of cases, seizures can be either partially or completely controlled with medication.
  • The remaining 20-25% of cases will have difficulty achieving seizure control.
  • Brain surgery is used only when medication fails and when seizures can be located in one area of the brain.
  • The ketogenic diet is a high fat, low carbohydrate diet used to treat some children with seizures that cannot be controlled with medications.
  • The vagus nerve stimulator is a surgically implanted devise that delivers a mild electrical current to the vagus nerve to help control seizure activity.  It is used with antiseizure medication.  This procedure is currently offered to people with intractable seizures.
  •  
    CEA Epilepsy Awareness Commercials
     
    Downloadable (8MB) Epilepsy Awareness Video - "On the Playground"
    (to save the video on your computer, right-click the link, then left-click Save Target As....)