Seizure Paralytic

A seizure is a sudden, short-term disruption of the body’s motor abilities in the form of involuntary fast or slow motor acts. Such attacks are usually accompanied by loss of consciousness or temporary confusion. A. O. Averkiev A seizure in medicine refers to a sharp disturbance of motor behavior, a condition when a person’s physical capabilities are severely limited by his nervous systems, sometimes reducing active movements to a minimum. A seizure may have symptoms of both convulsions and loss of consciousness. Paralytic seizures Paralytic is a convulsive disease manifested by a short-term loss of consciousness lasting no more than a couple of minutes. In addition, the patient experiences a short-term impairment of consciousness and control over his actions. This phenomenon is short-term in nature - up to several minutes. Symptoms of a seizure may be accompanied by fever, twitching of the limbs, difficulty breathing or cessation of cardiac activity, involuntary discharge of urine or feces, and increased sweating. The seizure conditions that occur during a paralytic seizure are mainly observed in children and can have a completely different character. Usually their causes are associated with the effects of various infections, usually caused by neuroinfection. In this case, the pain often increases to a certain limit: after a short sleep, immediately after the onset of the illness, the child begins to complain of general malaise, weakness, and headache. Headache, sometimes accompanied by nausea and vomiting, may also indicate the initial stages of an infectious disease. In most cases, paralysis is accompanied by existing diseases of the internal organs, such as rheumatism, pneumonia, and stomach ulcers. These diseases are the primary causes of seizures. It is extremely important to distinguish a true paralytic attack from psychogenic phenomena, such as hysterical pseudoparalysis (according to M.P. Nikolaev, for example, in this form the attack begins after any strong fear or overexcitation). Outwardly, this phenomenon is similar to an epileptic seizure, but the general condition of the body does not change. According to other experts, this state is much closer to panic. Hysteria can be distinguished by the fact that during an attempt at drug treatment, the convulsions do not stop and the patient does not lose consciousness. It is extremely important to distinguish such manifestations of hysteria from primary pathologies. Primary seizures include any manifestations of not only mental disorders, but also diseases. Such a seizure is accompanied by a temporary inability to control one’s actions. This condition due to epilepsy, senile dementia, diabetes mellitus