Past Issues

2024: Volume 5, Issue 2

A Few Words about Neonatal Seizures

Sinisa Franjic*

Independent Researcher, Croatia

*Corresponding author: Sinisa Franjic, Independent Researcher, E-mail: [email protected]

Received Date: September 04, 2024

Published Date: November 11, 2024

Citation: Franjic S. (2024). A Few Words about Neonatal Seizures. Neonatal. 5(2):20.

Copyrights: Franjic S. © (2024).

ABSTRACT

Seizures are changes in the brain's electrical signals. The attack is the same in a child and an adult. When too many nerve cells send signals, the child's brain cannot accept them and abnormal things happen. Epilepsy is a common neurological disorder that affects 65 million people in various parts of the world. It most often occurs in very young children or older adults, more often in males, although it can occur in any person. If epilepsy is caused by another condition that can be treated, such as an infection, a tumor or an abnormal sugar level, that condition is treated first because once that medical condition is corrected, the seizures will probably no longer occur. If the cause cannot be completely cured or cannot even be found, anti-seizure drugs are used to prevent further seizures.

Keywords: Children, Seizures, Diagnosis, Prognosis, Health.

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