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Seizure |
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Learn more about Seizures and other medical symptoms..Below you can find further information on this medical area. All this information is freely available for re-distribution both privately and commercially, according to the GNU free documentation license. Seizures (or convulsions) are temporary alterations in brain function expressing themselves into a changed mental state, tonic or clonic movements and various other symptoms. They are due to temporary abnormal electrical activity of a group of brain cells. The treatment of seizures is a subspecialty of neurology; the study of seizures is part of neuroscience. Signs and symptoms There are more than 20 different types of seizures. Seizures are often associated with epilepsy and related seizure disorders, although head trauma, intoxication, infection, metabolic disturbances, withdrawal symptoms (from sedatives such as alcohol, barbiturates and benzodiazepines) and space-occupying processes in the brain (abscesses, tumors) may also cause them. Seizures in (or shortly after) pregnancy can be a sign of eclampsia. Some medications produce an increased risk of seizures and electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) deliberately sets out to induce a seizure. Many seizures have unknown causes. Symptoms experienced by a person during a seizure depend on where in the brain the disturbance in electrical activity occurs. Some seizures may be frightening to onlookers. A person having a tonic-clonic seizure (also known as a grand mal seizure) may cry out, lose consciousness and fall to the ground, and convulse, often violently. A person having a complex partial seizure may appear confused or dazed and will not be able to respond to questions or direction. Some people have seizures that are not noticeable to others. Sometimes, the only clue that a person is having an absence (petit mal) seizure is rapid blinking or a few seconds of staring into space. Types petit mal seizure (an absence seizure, or very brief loss of consciousness. Typically these have a sudden onset, often with myoclonic jerking around the eyes, and can be induced by hyperventilation. They may present as learning difficulties.) A person who is going into seizures of any kind continuously, with little or no time separating one from the next, is said to be in "status epilepticus." This is the most dangerous situation possible with regard to seizures. It requires immediate emergency intervention, usually through the injection of appropriate anti-seizure drugs, or the person will die. When the person in "status" is pregnant, the stakes are even higher. Diagnosis Management Back to main Medical Symptom page Can't find what you are looking for? |
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