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Epilepsy in Children

Medically reviewed by Drugs.com. Last updated on Apr 2, 2024.

Epilepsy is a brain disorder that causes seizures. It is also called a seizure disorder. A seizure means an abnormal area in your child's brain sometimes sends bursts of electrical activity. A seizure may start in one part of your child's brain, or both sides may be affected. Depending on the type of seizure, your child may have movements he or she cannot control, lose consciousness, or stare straight ahead. Your child may be confused or tired after the seizure. A seizure may last a few seconds or longer than 5 minutes. A birth defect, tumor, stroke, injury, or infection may cause epilepsy. The cause of your child's epilepsy may not be known. If the seizures are not controlled, epilepsy may become life-threatening.

DISCHARGE INSTRUCTIONS:

Call your local emergency number (911 in the US) for any of the following:

Call your child's doctor if:

Medicines:

What you need to know about stopping your child's medicine:

Your child's healthcare provider can help you understand and make decisions about antiseizure medicines. Do not stop giving your child the medicine until his or her healthcare provider says it is okay. Your child will need to have no seizures for a period of time, such as 18 to 24 months. Then you and the provider can decide if your child should continue taking the medicine. The provider will lower your child's dose over a certain period of time. Seizures may happen again while your child stops taking the medicine, or after he or she stops. Rarely, these seizures no longer respond to medicines. Tests such as an EEG may be useful in helping you and your child's provider make medicine decisions.

Prevent a complication of epilepsy:

What you can do to help prevent your child's seizures:

You may not be able to prevent every seizure. The following can help you and your child manage triggers that may make a seizure start:

Treatment options

The following list of medications are related to or used in the treatment of this condition.

View more treatment options

What you can do to manage your child's epilepsy:

Protect your child during a seizure:

Keep your child safe:

Your child may need to follow these safety measures:

Follow up with your child's neurologist as directed:

Your child may need tests to check the level of antiseizure medicine in his or her blood. Your child's neurologist may need to change or adjust his or her medicine. Write down your questions so you remember to ask them during visits.

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The above information is an educational aid only. It is not intended as medical advice for individual conditions or treatments. Talk to your doctor, nurse or pharmacist before following any medical regimen to see if it is safe and effective for you.

Further information

Always consult your healthcare provider to ensure the information displayed on this page applies to your personal circumstances.