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What is Epilepsy?
Epilepsy is a brain disorder in which clusters of nerve
cells, or neurons, in the brain sometimes signal abnormally. Neurons normally generate
electrochemical impulses that act on other neurons, glands, and muscles to produce human
thoughts, feelings, and actions. In epilepsy, the normal pattern of neuronal activity
becomes disturbed, causing strange sensations, emotions, and behavior, or sometimes convulsions,
muscle spasms, and loss of consciousness. During a seizure, neurons may fire as many as
500 times a second, much faster than the normal rate of about 80 times a second. In some
people, this happens only occasionally; for others, it may happen up to hundreds of times
a day.
More than 2 million people in the United States
about 1 in 100 have experienced an unprovoked seizure or been diagnosed with
epilepsy. For about 80 percent of those diagnosed with epilepsy, seizures can be
controlled with modern medicines and surgical techniques. However, about 20 percent of
people with epilepsy will continue to experience seizures even with the best available
treatment. Doctors call this situation intractable epilepsy. Having a seizure does
not necessarily mean that a person has epilepsy. Only when a person has had two or more
seizures is he or she considered to have epilepsy.
Epilepsy is not contagious and is not caused by mental
illness or mental retardation. Some people with mental retardation may experience
seizures, but seizures do not necessarily mean the person has or will develop mental
impairment. Many people with epilepsy have normal or above-average intelligence. Famous
people who are known or rumored to have had epilepsy include the Russian writer
Dostoyevsky, the philosopher Socrates, the military general Napoleon, and the inventor of
dynamite, Alfred Nobel, who established the Nobel prize. Several Olympic medalists and
other athletes also have had epilepsy. Seizures sometimes do cause brain damage,
particularly if they are severe. However, most seizures do not seem to have a detrimental
effect on the brain. Any changes that do occur are usually subtle, and it is often unclear
whether these changes are caused by the seizures themselves or by the underlying problem
that caused the seizures.
While epilepsy cannot currently be cured, for some people
it does eventually go away. One study found that children with idiopathic epilepsy,
or epilepsy with an unknown cause, had a 68 to 92 percent chance of becoming seizure-free
by 20 years after their diagnosis. The odds of becoming seizure-free are not as good for
adults, or for children with severe epilepsy syndromes, but it is nonetheless possible
that seizures may decrease or even stop over time. This is more likely if the epilepsy has
been well-controlled by medication or if the person has had epilepsy surgery.
Source: National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke