Sunday, January 31, 2010

Re: [epilepsy] Re: Types of Seizures

 

When I had grand mal szs -- I knew nothing that was going on. In fact twice I was taken into the hospital for 6 miles with the sirens blaring and I didn't know a thing until I woke up in bed in the hospital. Now that I have simple or complex szs I am awake but my brain is scrambled my daughters say.

Millie

----- Original Message -----
From: Robert Shaffer
To: epilepsy@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Sunday, January 31, 2010 8:24 PM
Subject: Re: [epilepsy] Re: New Type of Seizure

It sounds like a Grand Mal seizure. What he went through is very similar to the seizures that I have been having all my life. Grand Mal seizures are also called Tonic-Clonic seizures. I too, am fully aware of my surroundings, & people. Most of what you describe is perfectly normal. Post-ictal has a tendency to be fickle. Not everybody gets that particular symptom, and those that do, the sength and duration may vary. I hope this helps.

Respectfully,

Bob.

--- On Sun, 1/31/10, Jennifer Richardson <academyofthepossible@gmail.com> wrote:

From: Jennifer Richardson <academyofthepossible@gmail.com>
Subject: [epilepsy] Re: New Type of Seizure
To: epilepsy@yahoogroups.com
Date: Sunday, January 31, 2010, 1:29 AM

About half an hour ago, my 13 y.o. son had a seizure tonight that last 8

minutes 10 seconds, however he was coherent the whole time. The seizure

started off with him calling me rather scared after he had gone to bed,

yelling and crying that he couldn't move at all. I went in and started

timing his seizure. It started off being completely rigid and stiff as a

board, then went into the jerking motions. His full body was involved, both

arms, hands, legs, feet. He was talking to me during this saying how badly

it hurt in between lip smacking. He remembers having the seizure, and there

was no post ictal state. He did not urinate, vomit or drool. He has diastat,

but he was breathing the entire time. It was like one of his small focal

motor seizures except involving his entire body. I didn't expect at all for

him to have a full body seizure for that long and be coherent. His have

always been less than 5 minutes, grand mals included. We have never had to

use his diastat before.

It is my understanding that diastat is to help stop the seizure when the

child is not breathing. Is this correct? For those of you who use diastat,

how do you decide when to give it and when not to.

Right now, he is sitting at the table doing some art therapy making pictures

with sticks and glue. He was very upset after his seizure, feeling very

disabled. The art helps, and he is now smiling.

Clearly, he has recovered fine. I will of course monitor him closely to be

sure he does not have another seizure tonight, but this one was as close to

a grand mal as you get.

I would appreciate hearing others experiences.

Jennifer

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

__._,_.___
Just a friendly reminder: Please remember to sign your post and remember to clean up messages when you reply to them.  This is especially important if you are on digest.  This not only helps out the list owner but, it makes messages much easier to read when they arrive in our inboxes.

.

__,_._,___

No comments:

Post a Comment