Childhood Epilepsy
Spotting Possible Childhood Epilepsy Early
Suspect childhood epilepsy when a child has recurrent unprovoked episodes — staring spells, sudden jerks, stiffening or collapse — that recur in a stereotyped pattern. Epilepsy is a medical condition, so any suspected seizure warrants prompt referral to a doctor, not therapy-first or wait-and-watch.
A frontline health worker is often the first to notice a brief stare, a sudden jerk, or a parent's worried account of an unexplained spell — and that early notice can change a child's whole trajectory.
In short
Suspect possible childhood epilepsy when a child has recurrent, unprovoked episodes of altered awareness or abnormal movement — staring spells, sudden jerks, stiffening, or collapse — that recur in a stereotyped pattern. Epilepsy is a medical condition, so any suspected seizure warrants prompt referral to a doctor or PHC medical officer, not a wait-and-watch or therapy-first approach. A first seizure with fever, head injury, or no recovery between events is an emergency.Signs to recognise in the field
Episodes of altered awareness- Brief staring spells where the child stops, becomes unresponsive for a few seconds, then resumes as if nothing happened
- Sudden vacant pauses during play or feeding, sometimes with lip-smacking, blinking or fumbling movements
Abnormal movements
- Sudden jerks of the arms, head or whole body (especially clusters on waking)
- Stiffening of the limbs, or rhythmic shaking of one or both sides
- Sudden loss of muscle tone — a drop or collapse without an obvious trip
Around the event
- Eye-rolling, lip or face twitching, or unusual sounds
- Loss of bladder control, tongue-biting, or frothing during a larger event
- Confusion, drowsiness or weakness afterwards (the post-event phase)
Always ask the parent
- Do the spells look the same each time and recur? Stereotyped, repeated events are a key clue.
- Are there developmental concerns alongside — delayed milestones, regression, or learning difficulty?
Why prompt referral, not delay
A single event can have many causes, but recurrent unprovoked seizures are how epilepsy (ICD-11 8A6) presents. Because seizures can affect breathing, development and safety, this is a medical-urgency pathway: refer to the PHC medical officer or paediatrician the same day for any suspected seizure, and call for emergency help for a seizure lasting over 5 minutes, repeated seizures without recovery, or a seizure with fever or injury. Counsel the family on simple seizure first-aid: keep the child safe on their side, do not put anything in the mouth, and time the event.The Pinnacle way
Once a child is medically stabilised and diagnosed by a physician, developmental needs often run alongside — and that is where structured support helps. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care; our AbilityScore® is a clinician-administered structured assessment that profiles development to guide therapy, never to diagnose epilepsy itself. For co-occurring delays, developmental therapy supports the child's overall growth in partnership with the treating doctor.Trusted sources
Aligned with WHO ICD-11 (8A6 epilepsy), WHO guidance on epilepsy as a public-health priority, CDC and AAP resources on childhood seizures, and NIMHANS clinical resources on paediatric epilepsy.Next step — if you suspect a seizure in a child, refer to your PHC medical officer or paediatrician without delay; for developmental support after diagnosis, reach the Pinnacle clinical team on WhatsApp: +91 91001 81181.
This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.
What to watch
Treat as an emergency: a seizure lasting over 5 minutes, repeated seizures without recovery between them, a first seizure with high fever or head injury, or any breathing difficulty during an event — refer or call for help immediately.
Try this at home
Ask the parent to describe or video a typical spell on a phone if safe — a clear account of stereotyped, repeated events is the single most useful clue you can give the referring doctor.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 365 days
This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.
Frequently asked
Is a staring spell always epilepsy?
No. Brief inattention is common in young children, but staring spells that recur in the same way, where the child is genuinely unresponsive and unaware, deserve a medical check. A doctor distinguishes seizures from daydreaming.
Should I start therapy first if I suspect a seizure?
No. Epilepsy is a medical condition that needs prompt assessment by a doctor or paediatrician, who decides on investigation and treatment. Developmental therapy supports co-occurring delays only after medical care is in place.
What is an epilepsy emergency?
Call for emergency help for any seizure lasting over 5 minutes, repeated seizures without recovery in between, a first seizure with high fever or head injury, or breathing difficulty during an event.