Check www.webmd.com for more information about epilepsy. It's possible that the person is just clumsy and it is not a result of their epilepsy. But since epilepsy involves the brain, it may be related.
seizures
This can be a symptom of certain forms of epilepsy.
Coordination of movement
Ataxia: the lack of muscle coordination during voluntary movement.
Vertigo is an inner ear condition that affects your equilibrium, in turn causing nausea, dizziness and sometimes vomiting. Symptoms are worse with movement, and especially going from a flat to sitting or upright position. Another common symptom is "feeling like the room is spinning. Epilepsy is a neurolgical disorder that can cause seizures.
Epilepsy is defined as being the tendency to have recurring seizures. So the primary symptom of epilepsy is seizures. Seizures come in many types and many ranges of severity. There is the stereotypical view of seizures as being someone shaking all over violently, but many seizures can be so mild that you would not even notice that a person who is sitting beside you is having one.
Myoclonus can be a symptom of epilepsy, Tay-Sachs disease and other storage diseases; spinocerebellar degenerative diseases; Hallervorden-Spatz syndrome and Hallervorden-Spatz syndrome
Movement rhythm refers to the timing and coordination patterns of movement. It involves the regularity and variation in the speed, tempo, and intensity of physical actions. Movement rhythm is an important aspect of motor control and coordination in activities such as dance, sports, and rehabilitation.
A brain tumour is a form of cancer. Epilepsy is not a cancer. A tumour can actually cause a seizure. A seizure could be one symptom of a tumour. However, this is a cause only in a very small amount of people who have epilepsy.
Not directly. If someone has Epilepsy it maybe as a result of some damage to the brain. If they have some damage to the brain, that may impair their ability to learn. In that situation, their epilepsy is just another symptom of the same thing that is causing their learning difficulties. Not everyone that has learning difficulties has epilepsy. Most people with epilepsy are well capable of learning and it has no impact on their capacity to learn. If their epilepsy causes them to miss out on regular education, which would only be with someone who has severe epilepsy, that will obviously affect their learning.
Epilepsy is a neurological condition that disturbs the electrical functioning of the brain. It results in altered consciousness and seizures. The most common symptom of epilepsy is repeated seizures, the nature of which varies from one type of epilepsy to the other. As different people have different triggers, what changes may need to be made will differ from person to person. Lifestyle changes will not treat epilepsy as such, but will help people to have less seizures.
yes it chould