Treatment Overview
Treatment can reduce or prevent
seizures in most people who have
epilepsy, which can improve the quality of your life.
Controlling your epilepsy also lowers the risk of falling and other
complications that can happen when you have a seizure.
First your
doctor will determine what type of epilepsy and what kinds of seizures you
have. Treatment that controls one kind of seizure may have no effect on other
kinds. Your doctor will also consider your age, health, and lifestyle when
planning your treatment.
It may take time for you and your doctor
to find the right combination, schedule, and dosage of medicines to manage your
epilepsy. The goal is to prevent seizures while causing as few unwanted side
effects as possible. With the help of your doctor, you can weigh the benefits
of a particular treatment against its drawbacks, including side effects, health
risks, and cost.
After you and your doctor figure out the most
effective treatment for you, it is important that you follow your treatment
exactly as prescribed.
Initial treatment
Initial treatment for
epilepsy depends on the severity, frequency, and type
of
seizures and whether a cause for your condition has
been identified. Medicine is the first and most common approach. Antiepileptic
medicines do not cure epilepsy, but they help prevent seizures in well over
half of the people who take them.1
Medicines that may be used first to treat epileptic seizures
include:
See information on:
Epilepsy: Taking your medicines
properly.
Other types of treatment may be used along with medicines
to better control seizures, such as:
- Ketogenic diet, which is a high-fat
diet that has been used with some success to treat people, especially children,
who have severe, uncontrolled seizures. Some doctors may not support its
use.
- Vagus nerve stimulation. The stimulator device is used
with medicine or surgery to reduce seizures.
It is not always clear whether to begin
treatment after a first seizure. It is difficult to
predict whether you will have additional seizures. Antiepileptic medicines are
not usually prescribed unless you have risk factors for having another seizure,
such as brain injury, abnormal test results, or a family history of
epilepsy.
Ongoing treatment
If
epileptic seizures continue even though you are being
treated, additional or other antiepileptic medicines may be tried, including:
See information on:
Epilepsy: Taking your medicines
properly.
In addition to medicines, other treatments may be added
to help reduce the frequency and severity of epileptic seizures,
including:
- Ketogenic diet, which is a high-fat
diet that has been used with some success to treat people, especially children,
who have severe, uncontrolled seizures. Some doctors may not support its
use.
- Vagus nerve stimulation. The stimulator device is used
with medicine or surgery to reduce seizures.
- Brain surgery. Some
people with epileptic seizures do not respond to medicine but have great
success with surgery.
- Anterior temporal lobectomy is the most
common brain surgery for epilepsy in adults. It involves removing part of one
of the brain's temporal lobes to reduce seizures.
- Hemispherectomy is a common surgery for severe
epilepsy in children. This technique involves removing the damaged side of the
brain.
- Corpus callosotomy is another common
surgery for epilepsy in children. This technique involves surgically
disconnecting the two sides (hemispheres) of the brain to prevent
generalized seizures. It does not help with
partial seizures.
Surgery is not used just as a last resort to treat
epilepsy. Although brain surgery may sound frightening, it can successfully
reduce seizures that are harmful, severe, frequent, or do not respond to
medicines. Surgery can greatly improve the lives of some carefully screened
people with epilepsy and can be a better choice than trying numerous medicines.
If you would like to know if surgery is a good choice for you, talk with your
doctor.
Treatment if the condition gets worse
If you have
epilepsy with seizures that have not been controlled
with medicines or other treatments, you may want to consider having surgery to
reduce the frequency and severity of the seizures. While brain surgery may
sound frightening, it can be effective in reducing epileptic seizures and can
greatly improve the quality of your life. Surgery for epilepsy may involve
removing an area of abnormal tissue in the brain (such as a tumor or scar
tissue) or the specific area of brain tissue where seizures begin.
- Anterior temporal lobectomy is the most
common brain surgery for epilepsy in adults. It is the removal of part of one
of the brain's temporal lobes to reduce seizures.
- Hemispherectomy is a commonly used surgical technique
in children with severe epilepsy. In this procedure, the damaged side of the
brain is removed.
- Corpus callosotomy, another common
surgery, disconnects the two sides (hemispheres) of the brain to prevent
generalized seizures in children. This surgery does
not help with
partial seizures.
Treating prolonged seizures.Status epilepticus is a prolonged seizure or cluster
of seizures that requires emergency treatment. It can happen in people who
don't have a history of epilepsy and in those who do.
A seizure
or cluster of seizures that goes on for more than 20 to 30 minutes during which
you or the person seizing does not wake up may cause brain damage. Emergency
treatment should be started as soon as possible in these cases.
Medicine used to stop the seizure is given in a vein (intravenously, or IV) so that it takes effect more
quickly. If IV medicine is not available, medicine may be given rectally or as
a shot in the muscle.
Vital signs, such as blood pressure and
pulse rate, will be checked. A physical exam and various lab tests are done to
rule out or identify any life-threatening medical conditions (such as
meningitis,
stroke, or failure of the heart, liver, or kidneys)
that may have caused the prolonged seizure.
What To Think About
Early treatment may reduce the
risk of progressing to more frequent and severe seizures.
You are
more likely to have additional seizures if you have had two or more seizures.
Doctors usually recommend treatment in these cases.3
Misdiagnosis and inappropriate treatment can
lead to unnecessary medicine side effects and medical expenses, and a loss of
work or driving privileges. It can also make the time until you get treatment
for the actual condition longer.