Tonic-clonic seizures
- Can have ‘aura’, not prodrome
- Can occur while the patient is lying down, may arise from sleep
- At the beginning of the seizure the person may cry/shout out
- The person will lose consciousness
- Body will stiffen, they will fall if standing
- Lips may turn blue, saliva may run from their mouth and they might bite their tongue
- Rhythmical jerking of the limbs, crescendo in amplitude with gradually slowing (deceleration) following which cardio-respiratory rate may slow
- Usually lasts no longer than three minutes, but is followed by a slow recovery period lasting minutes to hours
- Patient will be amnestic for event
Focal aware seizure (also called ‘auras’ or ‘warnings’ and previously known as simple partial seizures)
- Focal seizures most commonly arise from a single structural variant or abnormality in the brain
- This means that the initial semiology (what the seizure feels like and looks like at the start) will be stereotyped (the same every time)
- Seizure activity can spread to affect the whole brain, so patients can have both focal seizures and tonic-clonic seizures
- No loss of consciousness
- A person may be able to explain the sensation they feel
- Can include:
- Déjà vu
- Butterflies in stomach
- Odd taste
- Odd smell
Focal seizure with impaired awareness (previously known as complex partial seizures)
- Focal seizures most commonly arise from a single structural variant or abnormality in the brain
- This means that the initial semiology (what the seizure feels like and looks like at the start) will be stereotyped (the same every time)
- Seizure activity can spread to affect the whole brain, so patients can have both focal seizures and tonic-clonic seizures
- May follow a focal aware seizure
- No recollection of the actions they may have carried out
- Response not normal if spoken to
- A person may demonstrate ‘automatisms’ such as:
- Picking at clothes
- Lip-smacking
- Chewing without being aware of this
Typical generalised absence (previously known as petit mal seizures)
- True ‘absence’ seizures are a form of generalised epilepsy and are more common in childhood
- They are distinct from focal seizures with impaired awareness – typically focal seizures arising from the temporal lobe
- Can cause an abrupt loss of consciousness
- The person appears blank/vacant
- The person may not fall, stiffen or jerk
Generalised myoclonic seizures
- The person appears as if something ‘made them jump’
- These seizures can occur singularly or repetitively
- They usually affect the upper body, head and/or arm(s)
- They are distinct from hypnic jerks, which occur just as people fall asleep – these are a benign phenomenon which everyone gets
Generalised atonic seizures (previously known as drop attacks or akinetic seizures)
- The person becomes completely floppy and falls if standing
- They usually fall forwards
- These seizures can cause severe injury
- This type of seizure is often seen in people with a learning disability and in combination with other seizure types
- It is extremely rare for these to occur for the first time in adults
Generalised tonic seizures
- Causes a loss of consciousness
- The person’s body stiffens
- They will often recover quickly
- These seizures can cause injury
- This type of seizure is often seen in people with a learning disability and in combination with other seizure types
Last reviewed: 13 December 2023