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Epilepsy refers to a chronc condition in
which repeated fits or attacks of unconsciousness occur
with or without convulsions. It is a serious disorder of
the central nervous system caused by abnormal electrical
activity of the brain. It occurs in both children and
adults. Most attacks, however, occur in childhood and in
early adult life. Attack rates show a progressive decline
in frequency with age.
Epilepsy is a very ancient disease. The actual word
epilepsy comes from the Greek word, which
means to seize upon . The ancient people
believed that evil spirits entered the body of the
persons affected, seized upon his soul and threw his body
into convulsions. The greeks believed that the gods
induced this disease. The early Christians blamed the
Devil for these convulsions.Symptoms
A child should
never be labelled as having epilepsy following a single
convulsion. Epilepsy is recognised by recurrent sudden
attacks at irregular intervals. The child-patient
twitches convulsively and falls unconscious to the ground
during these attacks which cause tremendous nervous
unheaval. There are two main types of epilepsy known as petit
mal and grand mal. Each follows its own
specific pattern.
In petit mal, which is a less serious form of epilepsy,an
attack comes and goes within a few seconds. The patient
has a momentary loss of consciousness, with no
convulsions, except someties a slight rigidity, or there
may be a slight attack of convulsion such as a jerk, or a
movement of eyes, head, trunk or extremities, with no
perceptible loss of consciousness. The patient may not
fall. He may suddenly stop what he is doing and then
resume it when the attack is over, without even being
aware of what has happened. Petit mal attacks may occur
at any time in life but are most frequent in children.
The attack in case of grand mal comes with a dramatic
effect. There are violent contractions of the arms, legs,
and body, accompanied by a sudden loss of consciousness.
Before the onset of an attack, some patients get a
warning in the form of strange sensations. In young
children this may not be described but the mother can
often recognise a typical pattern of behaviour.
In a typical attack, the child cries out, falls to the
ground, loses consciousness and develops convulsions. The
convulsions may be accompanied with the mouth, twitching
of the muscles, biting of the tongue, disorted fixation
of limbs, rotation of the head and deviation of the eyes.
The child may lose control of his urine and faeces. The
attack may last several minutes and is usually followed
by a deep sleep. On waking up, he may be confused or
irritable. He may not remember anything about the attack.
Grand mal spasms, particularly the first one, are very
frightening to the parents. They often think that the
child is going to die and this feeling continues through
many attacks until they can accept the benign nature of
the convulsions. Children who suffer from epilepsy are
not abnormal in any other way.
Causes
Epilepsy denotes
electrical malfunctioning within the brain due to damage
of brain cells or some inherited abnormality. There are
many causes of epilepsy. Digestive disturbances,
intestinal toxaemia and a strained nervous condition are
very often the main cause of petit mal. Grand mal usually
results from hereditary influences, serious shock or
injury to the brain or nervous system. Meningitis,
typhoid and other disease accompanied with prolonged high
temperature can also lead to grand mal epilepsy.
Epilepsy attack may be caused by several other factors.
It may result from allergic reaction to certain food
substances, especially some particular form of protein
which is the main constitutent of meat.
Treatment
The most important
aspect of treatment of epilepsy is the diet. To begin
with, the child should be placed on an exclusive fruit
diet for a few days. During this period, he should take
fresh juicy fruits such as oranges, apples, grapes,
grapefruit, peaches,pears, pineappleand melon.
Thereafter, he may gradually adopt a well- balanced diet,
according to his age. The emphasis should be on whole
grain cereals, raw or lightly-cooked vegetables, and
fresh fruits. The diet should include a moderate form of
milk, preferably goats milk and milk products such
as curd,butter and homemade cottage cheese.
The diet should eliminate completely all animal proteins,
except milk, as they not only lack in magnesium but also
rob the body of its own magnesium storage as well as of
vitamin B6. Both these substances are needed in large
amounts by the epileptics. Best food sources of magnesium
are raw nuts, seeds, soyabeans, green leafy vegetables
such as spinach, and beet roots. The patient should avoid
all reined foods, fried and greasy foods, sugar and
products made with it, strong tea, coffee, condiments and
pickles. He should avoid over-eating and take frequent
small meals, rather than a few large ones. He should not
eat large meals before gong to bed.
Certain home remedies have been found beneficial in the
treatment of epilepsy. The most important of these is the
use of grape juice. The child should take about 250 ml.
of the juice of fresh grapes thrice a day for three
months. It will provide immense relief and help in the
cure of the disease. Certain vegetable juices ,
especially carrot juice in combination with juices of
beats and cucumber have also been found valuable in
epilepsy. Formula proportions considered helpful in this
combination are 150 ml. of carrot juice and 50 ml.each of
beet and cucumber juices to prepare 250 ml. of combined
juices.
Vitamin B6 or pyridoxine is considered useful in
epilepsy. This vitamin is involved in critical functions
of the nervous system. The valuable vegetable sources of
this vitamin are milk, brewers yeast, cereals,
legumes, green leafy vegetables, carrots and peanuts.
The herb brahmi booti, botanically known as Herpesties
monniera has been found valuable in epilepsy. Half a
teaspoon of the juice of this plant, sweetened with equal
quantity of honey, should be given to the patient thrice
daily. The herb Indian spikenart (jatamansi) is
also considered useful in epilepsy. It soothes the
nervous system and induces tranquility of the mind. It
should be given in very small doses of half a gram each.
The herb valerian (jalakan) has acquired great
reputation in recent years as a cure for epilepsy. It has
been used traditionally in functional disturbances of
nervous system. The drug exercises depressant action on
the central nervous system. An infusion, prepared by
infusing 15 grms of the herb in 250 ml. of boiling water,
should be taken in small quantities thrice daily.
Mud packs applied to the abdomen twice daily help remove
toaxamic conditions of the intestines and thereby hasten
improvement of epileptic conditions. The application of
alternate hot and cold compresses to the base of the
brain , that is at the back of the head will be
beneficial. The procedure is to dip the feet in a bucket
of hot water and apply first a hot towel and then a cold
one to the base of the brain. The alternate hot and cold
towels should be kept for two or three minutes four
times. The process should be repeated twice every day.
If the sufferer from epilepsy has taken strong drugs for
many years, he should not leave off entirely all at once.
The dosage may be cut down to half to begin with and then
gradually reduced further until it can be left off
completely.
The epileptic child should be encouraged to lead as
normal a life as possible but some activities are
unacceptably risky like swimming and driving vehicle and
should be avoided. Thus for instance, bicycle riding on
the main road may be fatal if the child has a convulsion.
Similarly, unsupervised swimming should be prohibited.
The child should be allowed to undertake certain
activities, which involve considerable risk, only in the
presence of a responsible adult.
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