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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
10 pages in length. The writer discusses etiology, diagnoses, treatment and educational implication as they relate to seizure disorder in school-aged children. Bibliography lists 14 sources.
Page Count:
10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCSeizure.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
at intervals and are not simply isolated incidents that happen once and never again are diagnosed as epilepsy, either symptomatic or idiopathic (The Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy, 2005).
While a number of physiological reasons exist for symptomatic epilepsy, the type that is most challenging for medical professionals to address - as well as being most widespread with
children between the ages of two and fourteen (The Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy, 2005) - is the idiopathic seizure, identified as "unprovoked seizures without an identified underlying cause"
(Williams, 2003, p. 222). According to Buttaravoli and Stair (2000), authors of Minor Emergencies: Splinters to Fractures, the predominance of idiopathic epilepsy is much more prevalent in the first
two decades of an individuals life. "In the 12 to 20-year-old patient, the seizure is probably idiopathic, although other causes are certainly possible. In the 40-year-old patient with
a first seizure, one needs to exclude neoplasm, post-traumatic epilepsy, or withdrawal. In the 65-year-old patient with a first seizure, cerebrovascular insufficiency must also be considered" (Buttaravoli et al,
2000). According to The Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy (2005), people from birth through age twenty have a one-percent risk of developing epilepsy; the changes increases to three
percent at seventy-five years of age. The typical nature of epilepsy is to strike an individual with but a single type, however, approximately thirty percent of people with epilepsy
suffer with at least two different categories. Generalized tonic-clonic seizures are represented in ninety percent of all epileptics, which equates to thirty percent in multiple epileptics and sixty in
single. Six percent of single and twelve percent in multiple epileptics experience complex partial seizures, while four percent of singles and twenty-one percent of multiples have absence seizures (The
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