COVER STORY: HEALTH

A STORM IN THE BRAIN

The toll of epilepsy has been overlooked—and the research underfunded—for too long. A call to action.

 

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The statistics are stark and sobering— and for the uninitiated (which is to say most of us), startling. Epilepsy in America is as common as breast cancer, and takes as many lives. A mysterious and widely misunderstood affliction, epilepsy is a disorder in which the brain produces sudden bursts of electrical energy that can interfere with a person's consciousness, movements or sensations. Up to 50,000 Americans die each year from seizures and related causes, including drownings and other accidents; one in 10 people will suffer a seizure in their lifetimes. By some estimates, the mortality rate for people with epilepsy is two to three times higher—and the risk of sudden death is 24 times greater—than that of the general population. There are 200,000 new cases each year, and a total of more than 3 million Americans are affected by it—more than multiple sclerosis, cerebral palsy, muscular dystrophy and Parkinson's disease combined. Between 1 and 3 percent of the population will develop some form of epilepsy before age 75.

 
COVER STORY: HEALTH

The toll of epilepsy has been overlooked—and the research underfunded—for too long. A call to action.

 

There is also a rise expected in the incidence of epilepsy among the veterans of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq who have sustained traumatic head injuries. Yet public and private funding for research lag far behind other neurological afflictions, at $35 a patient (compared, for instance, with $129 for Alzheimer's and $280 for multiple sclerosis). It is time to remedy that gap, and to raise epilepsy to the front ranks of public and medical concern.

There is cause for hope. Science is unraveling more and more of the mysteries of the brain, and perhaps the source of the cataclysmic electrical storms of epilepsy will yield its secrets. Such, at least, is the aim of Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, who is considering a major bill to support enhanced research that will fund more work toward a cure, and of a resolute band of advocates that includes the man who sits nearest the Oval Office in the West Wing. White House senior adviser David Axelrod and his wife, Susan, are the parents of Lauren, a 27-year-old who began suffering seizures when she was 7 months old. Mrs. Axelrod, who contributes a piece in the following pages, is a founding board member and president of CURE—Citizens United for Research in Epilepsy. The group's mission is clear from the acronym: to learn everything we can about epilepsy in search of a cure.

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Epilepsy is an ancient brain disorder, and different cultures at different times have veered between considering it a disease or thinking of it as a sign of demonic possession. Around 400 B.C., Hippocrates defined it as a physical, not a spirit, affliction, writing of what was then called "the Sacred Disease": "It appears to me to be nowise more divine nor more sacred than other diseases, but has a natural cause like other affections." Julius Caesar suffered from it; Jesus cured people with epilepsy in Gospel accounts of his ministry. The word itself is derived from the Latin epilepsia, which means "to take hold of." In 1604, Shakespeare has Othello suffer a kind of seizure as Iago works him into a frenzy of jealousy: "My lord is fall'n into an epilepsy," Iago tells Cassius. Seizures played a role in convicting suspected witches through the ages. Well into the 20th century, some states had sterilization laws that applied to people with epilepsy, and several more forbade those with epilepsy from marrying. In 1956, Roscoe L. Barrow and Howard D. Fabing published "Epilepsy and the Law: A Proposal for Legal Reform in the Light of Medical Progress," a book that helped lead to the repeal of many sterilization and antimarriage laws.

Though the most overt examples of discrimination and demonization have faded with time, epilepsy still receives too little attention, either from the medical community or the public at large. Why? One reason is that advances in drug treatments have created the popular impression that epilepsy is now an essentially manageable condition. (Which, for two thirds of patients, it is. But that still leaves a third for whom it is not.) It is thought to be rarely fatal, controllable by medication. There is a terrible irony here: because most people with epilepsy are not in a constant state of seizure—they are, rather, in perpetual but quiet danger—their condition can appear less serious than it truly is. It is all too human, but all too true, that a problem, including the problem of a serious medical affliction, stays out of mind when it is out of sight.

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: drb1001 @ 11/02/2009 8:21:33 AM

    Thank you for this informative article. I have dealt with epilepsy since I was 8 years old. My parents didn't explain to me what my condition was. It wasn't until I was in college that I understood what "I had". I remember the neurologist telling me at the time that there was no guarantee the seizures wouldn't return. And he was correct. One cause that you didn't touch upon was the role that hormones take. I relatively fine until I started menopause and then, the auoras, migrane headaches, and when the conditions were right, a full blown seizure happened. Other things would trip them in combination-such as heavy travel schedule, work stress, lack of sleep, etc. Until I found a neuroendochronologist who helped put a stop to the episodes. My neurologist at the time almost laughed at the idea that this is why I was having seizures. The ironic thing is, no one is immune from seizures, they could occur at any stage in a person's life with no explaination. To this day, there is no reason for mine, and could relate to the struggles and frustrations of those in the article. I never told anyone I had epilepsy, I was too afraid of their reaction because of the stigma associated with it. Now, I freely tell people, they need to know. What bothers me the most is, am I more of a danger to someone on the road with Diabetes or a Heart condition? I don't think so, my seizures are controllable. Why are people with Epilepsy considered more of a threat than those two other groups?

  • Posted By: tiffyfit @ 10/30/2009 2:48:22 PM

    HELP US HELP OUR DAUGHTER!!! She has suffered from epilepsy since she was 5 months old, we are currently trying to raise money for medical treatment in the Dominican Republic any amount is sincerly appreciated. Please visit her website www.tiffanysfaith.com

  • Posted By: jill5677 @ 07/06/2009 2:20:32 PM

    Visit www.journeyforjess.com to learn more about a family who has set out to raise money (and awareness!!!) for seizure-related disorders, in honor of their angel girl Jess, who died after complications from a prolonged-seizure. The journey starts on Friday and will last 3 weeks. Follow their blog and support their cause!!!

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