Diagnosis
Epilepsy FAQs
Pediatric neurologist Lily Wong-Kisiel, M.D., answers the most frequently asked questions about epilepsy.
Ask Mayo Clinic - Epilepsy
Lily Wong-Kisiel, M.D., Pediatric Neurologist, Mayo Clinic:
What are the tests for epilepsy?
Epilepsy is a syndrome diagnosis. It's a symptom that describes brainwave abnormalities. There are underlying causes that need to be evaluated. MRI of the brain to look for structural abnormality, EEG to look at characteristics of the brainwave activity so the physician can categorize which type or types of seizure the patient has. Then there are, in some children, genetic causes, neurometabolic causes or auto-immune causes that can be looked at.
What is a seizure action plan?
A seizure action plan is a roadmap for nurses and teachers at school to help your child should a seizure happen at school. It includes information about what type of seizure, what your child's seizure looks like, and if there is any anti-seizure medication that should be used while the seizure is happening to shorten the seizures or how to contact the family should prolonged seizures happen.
How harmful are seizures?
So most seizures are brief. Depending on the patient, there are absence seizures that are five to six seconds. Other patients may have generalized tonic-clonic seizures which last two to three minutes. Those short, brief seizures, although it may feel like a lifetime for parents, they do not cause negative impact on growth and development. However, we do have to worry about prolonged seizures that are greater than five minutes or multiple seizures, generalized tonic-clonic seizures, more than three in an hour, in which case, your doctor may talk to you about a seizure action plan.
How are seizures monitored?
This depends on the seizure type. For the absence seizures which are subtle staring, this depends on your observation of how often this is happening to your child. For those patients where it's not possible or practical to monitor all the time, it is helpful to ask and talk to your physician about EEG monitoring with video ongoing. This could be helpful for those subtle seizures that are less detectable by visual inspection. For those patients who have nocturnal seizures where it's not practical to monitor consistently when everyone is asleep, video EEG monitoring can also be quite helpful in determining the seizure frequency. For those patients who have generalized tonic-clonic seizures where there are convulsive movements, there are FDA-cleared devices, wearable devices, that can detect these generalized tonic-clonic seizures based on movements.
What is medically refractory epilepsy? Seizures that can't be controlled by medication.
About a third of the patients with epilepsy can continue to have seizures despite appropriate treatment. In those patients, evaluation for surgery can be an option. Epilepsy surgery can be an option for those patients who have a focal epilepsy, where a focus can be identified and safely removed. Epilepsy surgery is also an option for certain types of generalized epilepsy, where disconnection surgery can be performed.
How can I be the best partner to my epilepsy team?
First of all, be prepared with your questions when you come to your clinic visits. Come with your observation of the different seizure type or types that you've observed, know what the duration of the seizures are and have a seizure calendar so that you and your physician and your care team can review the frequency of your seizures.
Diagnosing your condition
EEG brain activity
EEG brain activity
An EEG records the electrical activity of your brain via electrodes affixed to your scalp. EEG results show changes in brain activity that may be useful in diagnosing brain conditions, especially epilepsy and other seizure disorders.
CT scan
CT scan
A CT scan can see nearly all parts of the body and is used to diagnose disease or injury as well as to plan medical, surgical or radiation treatment.
Pinpointing seizure location
Pinpointing seizure location
This example shows SPECT scans taken during and between seizures. The differences represent areas where blood flow increased during the seizure. Once identified, that location is fitted onto an MRI scan of the brain.
To diagnose your condition, your health care provider will likely review your symptoms and medical history. You may have several tests to diagnose epilepsy and to detect the cause of seizures. Your evaluation may include:
You also may have one or more brain imaging tests and scans that detect brain changes:
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Electroencephalogram (EEG). This is the most common test used to diagnose epilepsy. In this test, electrodes are attached to your scalp with a paste-like substance or cap. The electrodes record the electrical activity of your brain.
If you have epilepsy, it's common to have changes in your typical pattern of brain waves. These changes occur even when you're not having a seizure. Your health care provider may monitor you on video during an EEG to detect and record any seizures you experience. This may be done while you're awake or asleep. Recording the seizures may help determine what kind of seizures you're having or rule out other conditions.
The test may be done in a health care provider's office or the hospital. If appropriate, you also may have an ambulatory EEG, which you wear at home while the EEG records seizure activity over the course of a few days.
You may get instructions to do something that can cause seizures, such as getting little sleep prior to the test.
- High-density EEG. In a variation of an EEG test, you may have a high-density EEG, which spaces electrodes more closely than does conventional EEG. High-density EEG may help more precisely determine which areas of your brain are affected by seizures.
- Computerized tomography (CT) scan. A CT scan uses X-rays to obtain cross-sectional images of your brain. CT scans can detect tumors, bleeding or cysts in the brain that might be causing epilepsy.
- Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). An MRI uses powerful magnets and radio waves to create a detailed view of the brain. Like a CT scan, an MRI looks at the structure of the brain to detect what may be causing seizures. But an MRI provides a more detailed look at the brain than a CT scan.
- Functional MRI (fMRI). A functional MRI measures the changes in blood flow that occur when specific parts of the brain are working. This test may be used before surgery to identify the exact locations of critical functions, such as speech and movement, so that surgeons can avoid injuring those places while operating.
- Positron emission tomography (PET). PET scans use a small amount of low-dose radioactive material that's injected into a vein to help visualize metabolic activity of the brain and detect changes. Areas of the brain with low metabolism may indicate places where seizures occur.
Single-photon emission computerized tomography (SPECT). This type of test is used primarily if MRI and EEG didn't pinpoint the location in the brain where the seizures are originating.
A SPECT test uses a small amount of low-dose radioactive material that's injected into a vein to create a detailed, 3D map of the blood flow activity in the brain during seizures. Areas of higher than typical blood flow during a seizure may indicate places where seizures occur.
Another type of SPECT test called subtraction ictal SPECT coregistered to MRI (SISCOM) may provide even more-detailed results by overlapping the SPECT results with brain MRI results.
- Neuropsychological tests. These tests assess thinking, memory and speech skills. The test results help determine which areas of the brain are affected by seizures.
Along with your test results, a combination of analysis techniques may be used to help pinpoint where in the brain seizures start:
- Statistical parametric mapping (SPM). SPM is a method of comparing areas of the brain that have increased blood flow during seizures to the same areas of the brains of people who don't have seizures. This provides information about where seizures begin.
- Electrical source imaging (ESI). ESI is a technique that takes EEG data and projects it onto an MRI of the brain to show areas where seizures are occurring. This technique provides more-precise detail than does EEG alone.
- Magnetoencephalography (MEG). MEG measures the magnetic fields produced by brain activity. This helps identify potential areas where seizures start. MEG can be more accurate than EEG because the skull and tissue surrounding the brain interfere less with magnetic fields than with electrical impulses. MEG and MRI together provide images that show areas of the brain both affected by seizures and not affected by seizures.
Accurate diagnosis of your seizure type and where seizures begin gives you the best chance for finding an effective treatment.
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Treatment
Treatment can help people diagnosed with epilepsy have fewer seizures or even completely stop having seizures. Possible treatments include:
- Medicines.
- Surgery.
- Therapies that stimulate the brain using a device.
- A ketogenic diet.
Medication
Most people with epilepsy can become seizure-free by taking one anti-seizure medicine, which is also called anti-epileptic medicine. Others may be able to decrease the frequency and intensity of their seizures by taking a combination of medicines.
Many children with epilepsy who aren't experiencing epilepsy symptoms can eventually discontinue medicines and live a seizure-free life. Many adults can discontinue medicines after two or more years without seizures. Your health care team can advise you about the appropriate time to stop taking medicines.
Finding the right medicine and dosage can be complex. Your provider may consider your condition, frequency of seizures, age and other factors when choosing which medicine to prescribe. Your provider also may review any other medicines you may be taking to ensure the anti-epileptic medicines won't interact with them.
You may first take a single medicine at a relatively low dosage and then increase the dosage gradually until your seizures are well controlled.
There are more than 20 different types of anti-seizure medicines available. The medicines that you take to treat your epilepsy depend on the type of seizures you have, as well as other factors such as your age and other health conditions.
These medicines may have some side effects. Mild side effects include:
- Fatigue.
- Dizziness.
- Weight gain.
- Loss of bone density.
- Skin rashes.
- Loss of coordination.
- Speech problems.
- Memory and thinking problems.
More-severe but rare side effects include:
- Depression.
- Suicidal thoughts and behaviors.
- Severe rash.
- Inflammation of certain organs, such as the liver.
To achieve the best seizure control possible with medicine, follow these steps:
- Take medicines exactly as prescribed.
- Always call your health care provider before switching to a generic version of your medicine or taking other medicines — those you get with or without a prescription — or herbal remedies.
- Never stop taking your medicine without talking to your health care provider.
- Notify your health care provider immediately if you notice new or increased feelings of depression, suicidal thoughts, or unusual changes in your mood or behaviors.
- Tell your health care provider if you have migraines. Your provider may prescribe one of the anti-epileptic medicines that can prevent your migraines and treat epilepsy.
At least half the people newly diagnosed with epilepsy become seizure-free with their first medicine. If anti-seizure medicines don't provide good results, you may be able to have surgery or other therapies. You'll likely have regular follow-up appointments with your health care provider to evaluate your condition and medicines.
Surgery
Epilepsy surgery
When medicines do not provide adequate control of seizures, epilepsy surgery may be an option. With epilepsy surgery, a surgeon removes the area of your brain that's causing seizures.
Surgery usually happens when tests show that:
- Your seizures originate in a small, well-defined area of your brain.
- The area in your brain to be operated on doesn't interfere with vital functions such as speech, language, motor function, vision or hearing.
For some types of epilepsy, minimally invasive approaches such as MRI-guided stereotactic laser ablation may provide effective treatment when an open procedure may be too risky. In these procedures, a thermal laser probe is directed at the specific area in the brain causing seizures to destroy that tissue in an effort to better control the seizures.
Although you may continue to need some medicine to help prevent seizures after successful surgery, you may be able to take fewer medicines and reduce your doses.
In a small number of people, surgery for epilepsy can cause complications such as permanently altering thinking abilities. Talk to your surgical team members about their experience, success rates and complication rates with the procedure you're considering.
Therapies
Vagus nerve stimulation
Vagus nerve stimulation
In vagus nerve stimulation, an implanted pulse generator and lead wire stimulate the vagus nerve, which leads to stabilization of electrical activity in the brain.
Deep brain stimulation
Deep brain stimulation
Deep brain stimulation involves implanting an electrode deep within the brain. The amount of stimulation delivered by the electrode is controlled by a pacemaker-like device placed under the skin in the chest. A wire that travels under the skin connects the device to the electrode.
MRI of deep brain stimulation
MRI of deep brain stimulation
A magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan of deep brain stimulation shows the location of electrodes placed in the brain.
Apart from medicines and surgery, these potential therapies offer an alternative for treating epilepsy:
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Vagus nerve stimulation. Vagus nerve stimulation may be an option when medicines haven't worked well enough to control seizures and surgery isn't possible. In vagus nerve stimulation, a device called a vagus nerve stimulator is implanted underneath the skin of the chest, similar to a heart pacemaker. Wires from the stimulator are connected to the vagus nerve in the neck.
The battery-powered device sends bursts of electrical energy through the vagus nerve and to the brain. It's not clear how this inhibits seizures, but the device can usually reduce seizures by 20% to 40%.
Most people still need to take anti-epileptic medicine, although some people may be able to lower their medicine dose. Vagus nerve stimulation side effects may include throat pain, hoarse voice, shortness of breath or coughing.
- Deep brain stimulation. In deep brain stimulation, surgeons implant electrodes into a specific part of the brain, typically the thalamus. The electrodes are connected to a generator implanted in the chest. The generator regularly sends electrical pulses to the brain at timed intervals and may reduce seizures. Deep brain stimulation is often used for people whose seizures don't get better with medicine.
- Responsive neurostimulation. These implantable, pacemaker-like devices can help significantly reduce how often seizures occur. These responsive stimulation devices analyze brain activity patterns to detect seizures as they start and deliver an electrical charge or medicine to stop the seizure before it causes impairment. Research shows that this therapy has few side effects and can provide long-term seizure relief.
Ketogenic diet
Some children and adults with epilepsy have been able to reduce their seizures by following a strict diet that's high in fats and low in carbohydrates. This may be an option when medicines aren't helping to control epilepsy.
In this diet, called a ketogenic diet, the body breaks down fats instead of carbohydrates for energy. After a few years, some children may be able to stop the ketogenic diet — under close supervision of their health care providers — and remain seizure-free.
Experts don't fully know how a ketogenic diet works to reduce seizures. But researchers think that the diet creates chemical changes that suppress seizures. The diet also alters the actions of brain cells to reduce seizures.
Get medical advice if you or your child is considering a ketogenic diet. It's important to make sure that your child doesn't become malnourished when following the diet.
Side effects of a ketogenic diet may include dehydration, constipation, slowed growth because of nutritional deficiencies and a buildup of uric acid in the blood, which can cause kidney stones. These side effects are uncommon if the diet is properly and medically supervised.
Following a ketogenic diet can be a challenge. Low-glycemic index and modified Atkins diets offer less restrictive alternatives that may still provide some benefit for seizure control.
Potential future treatments
Researchers are studying many potential new treatments for epilepsy, including:
- Continuous stimulation of the seizure onset zone, known as subthreshold stimulation. Subthreshold stimulation — continuous stimulation to an area of the brain below a level that's physically noticeable — appears to improve seizure outcomes and quality of life for some people with seizures. Subthreshold stimulation helps stop a seizure before it happens. This treatment approach may work in people who have seizures that start in an area of the brain called the eloquent area that can't be removed because it would affect speech and motor functions. Or it might benefit people whose seizure characteristics mean their chances of successful treatment with responsive neurostimulation are low.
- Minimally invasive surgery. New minimally invasive surgical techniques, such as MRI-guided focused ultrasound, show promise for treating seizures. These surgeries have fewer risks than traditional open-brain surgery for epilepsy.
- Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS). TMS applies focused magnetic fields on areas of the brain where seizures occur to treat seizures without the need for surgery. It may be used for patients whose seizures occur close to the surface of the brain and can't be treated with surgery.
- External trigeminal nerve stimulation. Similar to vagus nerve stimulation, a device stimulates specific nerves to reduce frequency of seizures. But unlike in vagus nerve stimulation, the device is worn outside the body so that no surgery is needed to put the device in the body. In studies, external trigeminal nerve stimulation provided improvements in both seizure control and mood.
You see, an epileptic seizure is an abnormal electrical disturbance of the brain. The device is implanted under the skin, and four electrodes are attached to the outer layers of your brain. The device monitors brain waves, and when it senses abnormal electrical activity it fires electrical stimulation and stops the seizures.
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Clinical trials
Explore Mayo Clinic studies testing new treatments, interventions and tests as a means to prevent, detect, treat or manage this condition.
Lifestyle and home remedies
Understanding your condition can help you take better control of it:
- Take your medicine correctly. Don't adjust your dosage before talking to a member of your health care team. If you feel that your medicine should be changed, discuss it with your provider.
- Get enough sleep. Lack of sleep can trigger seizures. Be sure to get adequate rest every night.
- Wear a medical alert bracelet. This will help emergency personnel know how to treat you correctly.
- Exercise. Exercising may help keep you physically healthy and reduce depression. Make sure to drink enough water, and rest if you get tired during exercise.
In addition, make healthy life choices, such as managing stress, limiting alcoholic beverages and avoiding cigarettes.
Coping and support
Uncontrolled seizures and their effects on your life may at times feel overwhelming or lead to depression. It's important not to let epilepsy hold you back. You can still live an active, full life. To help cope:
- Educate yourself and your friends and family about epilepsy so that they understand the condition.
- Try to ignore negative reactions from people. It helps to learn about epilepsy so that you know the facts as opposed to misconceptions about the disease. And try to keep your sense of humor.
- Live as independently as possible. Continue to work, if possible. If you can't drive because of your seizures, investigate public transportation options near you. If you aren't allowed to drive, you might consider moving to a city with good public transportation options.
- Find a health care provider you like and with whom you feel comfortable.
- Try not to constantly worry about having a seizure.
- Find an epilepsy support group to meet people who understand what you're going through.
If your seizures are so severe that you can't work outside your home, there are still ways to feel productive and connected to people. You may consider working from home.
Let people you work and live with know the correct way to handle a seizure in case they are with you when you have one. You may offer them suggestions, such as:
- Carefully roll the person onto one side to prevent choking.
- Place something soft under the person's head.
- Loosen tight neckwear.
- Don't try to put your fingers or anything else in the person's mouth. People with epilepsy will not "swallow" their tongues during a seizure — it's physically impossible.
- Don't try to restrain someone having a seizure.
- If the person is moving, clear away dangerous objects.
- If immediate medical help is needed, stay with the person until medical personnel arrive.
- Observe the person closely so that you can provide details on what happened.
- Time the seizures.
- Be calm during the seizures.
Preparing for your appointment
You're likely to start by seeing your primary care provider. However, when you call to set up an appointment, you may be referred immediately to a specialist. This specialist may be a doctor trained in brain and nervous system conditions, known as a neurologist, or a neurologist trained in epilepsy, known as an epileptologist.
Because appointments can be brief, and because there's often a lot to talk about, it's a good idea to be well prepared for your appointment. Here's some information to help you get ready for your appointment, and what to expect.
What you can do
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Keep a detailed seizure calendar. Each time a seizure occurs, write down the time, the type of seizure you experienced and how long it lasted. Also make note of any circumstances, such as missed medicines, sleep deprivation, increased stress, menstruation or other events that might trigger seizure activity.
Seek input from people who may observe your seizures, including family, friends and co-workers, so that you can record information you may not know.
- Be aware of any pre-appointment restrictions. At the time you make the appointment, ask if there's anything you need to do in advance, such as restrict your diet.
- Write down key personal information, including any major stresses or recent life changes.
- Make a list of all medicines, vitamins or supplements that you're taking.
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Take a family member or friend along. Sometimes it can be difficult to remember all the information provided to you during an appointment. Someone who accompanies you may remember something that you missed or forgot.
Also, because you may not be aware of everything that happens when you're having a seizure, someone else who has seen your seizures may be able to answer questions during your appointment.
- Write down questions to ask your health care provider. Preparing a list of questions will help you make the most of your appointment time.
For epilepsy, some basic questions include:
- What is likely causing my seizures?
- What kinds of tests do I need?
- Is my epilepsy likely temporary or chronic?
- What treatment approach do you recommend?
- What are the alternatives to the primary approach that you're suggesting?
- How can I make sure that I don't hurt myself if I have another seizure?
- I have these other health conditions. How can I best manage them together?
- Are there any restrictions that I need to follow?
- Should I see a specialist? What will that cost, and will my insurance cover it?
- Is there a generic alternative to the medicine you're prescribing?
- Are there any brochures or other printed material that I can take home with me? What websites do you recommend?
In addition to the questions that you've prepared, don't hesitate to ask questions during your appointment at any time that you don't understand something.
What to expect from your doctor
Your health care provider is likely to ask you a number of questions, such as:
- When did you first begin experiencing seizures?
- Do your seizures seem to be triggered by certain events or conditions?
- Do you have similar sensations just before the onset of a seizure?
- Have your seizures been frequent or occasional?
- What symptoms do you have when you experience a seizure?
- What, if anything, seems to improve your seizures?
- What, if anything, appears to worsen your seizures?
What you can do in the meantime
Certain conditions and activities can trigger seizures, so it may be helpful to:
- Avoid drinking excessive amounts of alcohol.
- Avoid using nicotine.
- Get enough sleep.
- Reduce stress.
Also, it's important to start keeping a log of your seizures before your appointment.