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Ency. home > Disease > G > Generalized tonic-clonic seizure
Generalized tonic-clonic seizure
Overview | Symptoms | Treatment | Prevention
Seizure - tonic-clonic; Seizure - grand mal; Grand mal seizure; Seizure - generalized
Definition:
A seizure involving the entire body, usually characterized by muscle rigidity, violent rhythmic muscle contractions, and loss of consciousness, caused by abnormal electrical activity in the nerve cells of the brain.
Causes and Risks Grand mal seizures (generalized tonic-clonic seizures, total seizures) affect approximately 2 out of 10,000 people. They are the type of seizure that most people associate with the term "seizure" (convulsion). They may occur in people of any age, as a single episode or as a repeated, chronic condition (epilepsy). The majority of seizures that occur as a single episode are grand mal seizures rather than other types.
Transmission of information from nerve cell to nerve cell occurs by an electrochemical process. This process can be detected as electrical activity by an EEG. Abnormal patterns of electrical activity are associated with seizures. Given sufficient circumstances, any person will have a seizure. Generalized tonic-clonic seizures are caused by abnormal electrical activity at multiple locations in the brain, or over the majority of the brain area.
Some of the more common causes of seizures include:
There may be changes in mental status (alertness, awareness) and/or focal neurologic symptoms (localized symptoms of changes in brain function) associated with the seizures.
Ency. home > Disease > G > Generalized tonic-clonic seizure
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