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OUTPATIENT CARE CENTERS &
AMBULATORY SERVICES

Main Hospital Campus
   » Waldemere Medical Plaza
   » Cape Outpatient Surgery Center
   » Heart & Vascular Institute

North County
   » North County Health Center
   » Health Care Center - University Parkway
   » Main Plaza Corporate Offices
   » Walk-In Medical Center - University Parkway

South County
   » Institute for Advanced Medicine
   » Nursing & Rehabilitation Center
   » Walk-In Medical Center - Gulf Gate
   » Health Care Center at Blackburn Point
  

SERVICES AND PROCEDURES A - I
   » Bariatric Program (CBP)
   » Breast Health Services
   » Cancer Care Services
   » Community Health Services
   » Diabetes Treatment Services  
   » Emergency Care
   » Endoscopy
   » Geriatric Services
   » Heart & Vascular
   » Institute for Advanced Medicine
   » Hyperbaric Medicine

SERVICES AND PROCEDURES J - Z
   » Nephrology/Urology
   » Neurology, Neuro Surgery
   » Orthopedics
   » Pain Center
   » Radiology (Imaging) Services
   » Rehabilitation Services
   » Respiratory Care
   » Sarasota Memorial Healthcare Foundation
   » Skilled Nursing and Rehabilitation Center
   » Women’s and Children’s Health Services

ADVANCES IN HEALTHCARE
   » Da Vinci Robotic Surgery
   » Minimally Invasive Heart Surgery
   » Induced Hypothermia
   » Dual Source Enhanced CT Scanner
   » Clinical Trials and Research

CLINICAL TRIALS & RESEARCH
   » The Clinical Research Center

HEALTH INFORMATION RESOURCES

   » Physician Referral Service
   » Personal Health Screenings
   » Community Health Calendar
   » Support Groups
   » Health Guide


BISHOPRIC MEDICAL LIBRARY
   » Patient Health Education
   » Physicians Resources
   » Nursing Resources
   » Mission/Services

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Frequently Asked Questions About Epilepsy and Seizures

What is epilepsy?
Epilepsy is a common condition that causes repeated seizures. The seizures are caused by bursts of electrical activity in the brain that are not normal. Seizures may cause problems with muscle control, movement, speech, vision, or awareness. They usually don't last very long, but they can be scary. The good news is that treatment usually works to control and reduce seizures. Epilepsy is not a type of mental illness or retardation … and it’s not contagious. You can't get epilepsy from someone else, and they can't get it from you.

What Causes Epilepsy?
Often doctors do not know what exactly causes epilepsy. Less than half of people with epilepsy know why they have it. Sometimes another problem, such as a head injury, brain tumor, brain infection, or stroke, causes epilepsy.

What Are the Symptoms?
The main symptom of epilepsy is repeated seizures that happen without warning. Without treatment, seizures may continue and even become worse and more frequent over time.

There are different kinds of seizures. You may have only one type of seizure. Some people have more than one type.

What Are the Different Types of Seizures?

  • Your senses may not work right. For example, you may notice strange smells or sounds.
  • You may lose control of your muscles.
  • You may fall down, and your body may twitch or jerk.
  • You may stare off into space.
  • You may faint (lose consciousness).

Are There Different Types of Epilepsy?
Not everyone who has seizures has epilepsy. Sometimes seizures happen because of an injury, illness, or another problem. In these cases, the seizures stop once that problem improves or goes away.

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How is Epilepsy Diagnosed?
Diagnosing epilepsy can be hard. If you think that you or your child has had a seizure, your doctor will first try to determine if it was a seizure or something else with similar symptoms. For example, a muscle tic or a migraine headache may look or feel like a kind of seizure. Your doctor will ask many questions. He or she will want to know what happened to you just before, during, and right after a seizure. Your doctor will also examine you and perform some tests, such as an EEG. This information can help your doctor decide what kind of seizures you have and if you have epilepsy.

Can Medicine Control Epilepsy?
Medicine controls seizures in many people with epilepsy. The goal is to find an effective drug that causes the fewest side effects. Once you find a medicine that works for you, take it exactly as prescribed. The best way to prevent more seizures is to keep the right amount of the drug in your body. To do that, you need to take the drug in the right dose and at the right time every day.

What Can I do If Medicine Doesn’t Control My Epilepsy?
If medicine alone does not control your seizures, your doctor may try one or more of these other treatments, including:

  • Surgery to remove damaged tissue in the brain or the area of brain tissue where seizures begin.
  • A special diet called the ketogenic diet. With this diet, you eat a lot more fat and less carbohydrates. This diet reduces seizures in some children with epilepsy.
  • A device called a vagus nerve stimulator (VNS). Your doctor implants the device under your skin near your collarbone. It sends weak signals to the vagus nerve in your neck and to your brain to help control seizures.

How will epilepsy affect my life?
Epilepsy affects each person differently. Some people have only a few seizures. Other people get them more often. Usually seizures are harmless, but depending on where you are and what you are doing when you have a seizure, you could get hurt. Talk to your doctor about whether it is safe for you to drive or swim.

If you know what triggers a seizure, you may be able to avoid having one. Getting regular sleep and avoiding stress may help. If treatment controls your seizures, you have a good chance of living and working like everyone else. But seizures can happen even when you do everything you are supposed to do. If you continue to have seizures, help is available. Ask your doctor about what services are available in your area.

For parents, it is normal to worry about what will happen to your child if he or she has a seizure. But it is also important to help your child live, play, and learn like other children. Talk to your child’s teachers and caregivers. Teach them what to do if your child has a seizure. There are many ways to lower your child’s risk of injury and still let him or her live as normally as possible. For example, learn about water safety for children who have seizures.

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Did You Know?

The earliest references to epilepsy date back 500 years B.C. to ancient Mesopotamia, where descriptions of the “falling disease” were recorded with remarkable accuracy. Sadly, the superstitions surrounding the disease have left a legacy that still, in part, persists today.

On the other hand, some have suggested a relationship between creativity or leadership abilities and epileptic and non-epileptic seizures. Many prominent religious and political leaders, philosophers, artists and scientists, have suffered, or are believed to have suffered, from the affliction, among them:

Political Leaders
Julius Caesar
Napoleon

Literature
Dostoyevsky
Gustave Flaubert

Music
George Gershwin
Neil Young
Philosophy
Socrates
Lenin
Religious Leaders
St. Paul
Pope Pius IX
Sports
Florence Griffith Joyner
Grover Cleveland Alexander
     

 

 

 

Under Florida law, e-mail addresses are public records.  If you do not want your e-mail address released in response to a public records request,
do not send electronic mail to this entity.  Instead, contact Sarasota Memorial Health Care System Public Relations Offices by phone or in writing:
1700 South Tamiami Trail, Sarasota, Florida 34239 | 941-917-9000 or 800-764-8255.
CONSUMER DATA: Sarasota Memorial is accredited by The Joint Commission. Click here for information.
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