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Treatment for epilepsy can include medication, diet restriction, surgery, or a new type of therapy called vagus nerve stimulation. Of all available treatments, medications known as anti-epileptic drugs, remain the most commonly prescribed therapy for seizures. Several different types of seizure medication are now available. At times, more than one medication will be needed to adequately control the seizures. Most anti-epileptic drugs must remain at a certain level within the bloodstream in order to be effective. Once a medication is found to be successful in controlling seizures, it can be closely monitored, by blood tests, to ensure that the correct amount of medication remains in the blood at all times.
Diet therapy, specifically a ketogenic diet, may be used to treat seizures. A ketogenic diet changes the way the body derives energy and has been shown to have a seizure preventing effect in children. The introduction of a ketogenic diet must be closely supervised by a physician and often requires that a child be hospitalized initially. Although this diet was first introduced 80 years ago, before the advent of most anti-epileptic drugs, it has gained renewed popularity in recent years, particularly in children whose seizures do not respond to medication. In fact, approximately 30% of children may be controlled by the ketogenic diet.
Unfortunately, as many as 30 percent of children who have epilepsy may have either an inadequate response to antiepileptic drugs or intolerable side effects to these drugs and fail the ketogenic diet. At least one-half of these children may be successfully treated through epilepsy surgery. If the seizures are confined to a small segment of the brain, sometimes by removing those pieces of brain tissue, seizure activity can be controlled.
Vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) is a newer type of treatment for hard to control seizures. VNS involves surgically placing a small "pacemaker" (under the skin below the collarbone) that is attached to wires that are programmed to deliver small bursts of electrical energy to a nerve in the neck.
In addition to the above therapies, a child with epilepsy can often help to control his or her seizures by getting enough sleep, avoiding unwanted stress and having regular medical check-ups by a physician. In some children, seizure disorders may resolve spontaneously. In spite of all the treatments now available to treat epilepsy, an estimated twenty- percent of children with epilepsy are unable to gain complete control over their seizures.
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