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Absence Epilepsy on The Rise Among Children

by Bidita Debnath on Nov 26 2016 11:56 PM

 Absence Epilepsy on The Rise Among Children
Absence Epilepsy -- a disorder in which epilepsy syndrome with absence seizures begins in young children -- has risen 8 percent in recent years, reveal doctors.
According to them, the disorder accounts for 4 out of 50 people with epilepsy and is curable as most of the children suffering from the disease respond to treatment.

"During Absence Epilepsy, the child will appear temporarily absent from their body. Seizures are usually staring spells during which the child is not aware or responsive. Each seizure lasts 10 to 20 seconds and ends abruptly. Two out of three children with childhood absence seizures respond to treatment. A child may have one or many (up to 100) absence seizures a day," said K.K. Gupta, Senior Paediatrician from the city's Saroj Super Speciality Hospital.

Gupta said absent mindedness was one of the most common cause for absence epilepsy. Doctors said the reasons behind the occurrence of absence epilepsy were brain damages from prenatal and perinatal injury, congenital abnormalities and brain infections among others.

"The treatment of absence epilepsy are not complicated. There are medicines that can help prevent absence seizures," said Rajiv Anand, Director of Neurology at the BLK Super Speciality Hospital.

"Usually the type of treatment prescribed will depend on several factors, including the frequency and severity of the seizures life. Most common type of surgery for treating epilepsy is the resective surgery.

"Deep brain stimulation therapy is a surgical treatment which aims to reduce seizures not controlled with medication and where surgery to treat the cause of seizures is not possible," he added.

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Source-IANS


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