When a patient has a seizure, the electrical activity in her brain is disrupted. The Merck Manual Home Edition states that about two percent of adults have a seizure, though two-thirds of them never have another one. Seizures are grouped into two categories: epileptic and non-epileptic. Epileptic seizures occur repeatedly with no cause, while non-epileptic seizures are brought on by another condition. There are different types of seizures which have various symptoms. The majority of patients (70 percent) have only one type of seizure, according to the Manual.

Simple Partial Seizures

The Epilepsy Foundation of New Jersey states that partial seizures, also called focal seizures, are the most common seizures. When a patient has a partial seizure, the abnormal electrical activity occurs on only one hemisphere of the brain. With a simple partial seizure, the patient does not have problems with consciousness or memory. A type of simple partial seizure, Jacksonian seizures have symptoms that start in one area of the body and move to another part.

Complex Partial Seizures

The other type of partial seizure, complex partial seizures, do affect memory and behavior, according to the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Symptoms include staring, not understanding what other people say, smacking lips, moving limbs in strange ways and speaking nonsense.

Generalized Tonic-Clonic Seizures

Unlike partial seizures, generalized seizures have abnormal electrical activity on both hemispheres of the brain. Generalized tonic-clonic seizures, also called grand-mal seizures, are the type of seizure that people associate with epilepsy, according to the NIH. Each episode lasts between one to two minutes. Symptoms of generalized tonic-clonic seizures are drooling, falling, tongue biting and severe muscle spasms.

Absence Seizures

Petit mal seizures, also called absence seizures, are most common in people under age 20, according to the NIH. The hallmark symptom is a staring episode, which lasts for 15 seconds. The seizure can start without any warning signs.

Atonic Seizures

Another type of seizure, atonic seizures are found mainly in children, according to the Merck Manual Home Edition. While short, this type of seizure causes the patient to fall and lose consciousness.

Tonic Seizures

Tonic seizures occur mainly when the patient is asleep, and last between 10 and 15 seconds. The patient's muscles stiffen during an episode, and if she is standing, the patient may fall.

Myoclonic Seizures

When a patient has a myoclonic seizure, she has “quick jerks of one or several limbs or the trunk,” according to the Merck Manual Home Edition. While the patient does not lose consciousness, multiple myoclonic seizures may lead to tonic-clonic seizures.

Status Epilepticus

The most serious seizure disorder, status epilepticus is diagnosed when the patient has a seizure that lasts more than five minutes or the patient does not regain her consciousness in between seizures, according to the Merck Manual Home Edition. This type of seizure causes severe problems, such as breathing problems and increased body temperature. Untreated status epilepticus may result in death.

Febrile Seizures

Triggered by a fever, about three to five percent of children between nine months and five years old have this type of seizure, according to the NIH. Symptoms include limb stiffening, rolling of the eyes, crying from the muscle contractions, vomiting and breathing problems.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Elizabeth Stannard Gromisch received her bachelor’s of science degree in neuroscience from Trinity College in Hartford, CT in May 2009. She is the Hartford Women's Health Examiner and she writes about abuse on Suite 101.