Generally epilepsy is controlled rather than cured. Children often stop getting seizures as they grow older. However, every case is different so each individual would have to be monitored by a doctor to see what happens.
There is no known cure for epilepsy, though there are treatments that may help to control it.
There is no known cure for epilepsy, though there are treatments that may help to control it.
Prince did suffer from childhood epilepsy.
The cast of NHS Advances in Childhood Epilepsy - 2012 includes: Georgina Burnett as Herself - Presenter Alison Cornell as Herself - Campaigns Coordinator, Young Epilepsy Louise Cousins as Herself - Spokesperson, Epilepsy Action
Epilepsy (sometimes referred to as a seizure disorder) is a common chronic neurological condition that is characterized by recurrent unprovoked epileptic seizures. These seizures are transient signs and/or symptoms due to abnormal excessive or synchronous neuronal activity in the brain. It affects approximately 50 million people worldwide. Epilepsy is usually controlled, but not cured, with medication, although surgery may be considered in difficult cases. Not all Epilepsy syndromes are lifelong, for example some are confined to particular stages of childhood.
An absence seizure or a petit mal.
There is a wide variety of forms of epilepsy and many causes. So no one thing can be said to be able to cure it. Epilepsy is mainly controlled rather than cured. Each individual case is different and has to be looked at in that way.
Infantile spasms (IS) are seizures seen in epilepsy of infancy and early childhood
No a fever and a loss of iron deficency is not the cause of epilepsy, it caused by a accident or a head banging something hard.
The general usage word is 'absence', meaning 'being away'. There is also a medical term relating to epilepsy often spelled 'absense' but this is an incorrect spelling. The correct spelling is also 'absence'. - bja
So far as we know at this stage, there is no relationshipbetween absence seizures Previously known Petit Mal Seizures as found with epilepsy, and RA
There are actually six types of seizures. 1. Grand Mal - Unconsciousness, convulsions, muscle rigidity 2. Absence - Brief loss of consciousness 3. Myoclonic - Sporadic jerking movements 4. Clonic - Repetitive jerking movements 5. Tonic - Muscle stiffness and rigidity 6. Atonic - Loss of muscle tone