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Autism with Epilepsy

Managing Autism Alongside Epilepsy

When autism and epilepsy occur together, seizures are managed first and medically by a paediatric neurologist, while developmental and therapy support continues in parallel. The two are coordinated so medication, alertness and recovery shape therapy pacing. With good seizure control and a steady, strengths-based plan, children make meaningful progress.

Managing Autism Alongside Epilepsy
Autism with Epilepsy — One Coordinated Plan — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

When two conditions travel together, families need one calm, coordinated plan — not two competing ones.

In short

When autism and epilepsy occur together, the seizures are managed first and medically, by a paediatric neurologist, while developmental and therapy support for communication, learning and daily skills continues alongside. The two are coordinated, not separated: medication choices, seizure control and a child's energy and alertness all shape how therapy is paced. With good seizure control and a steady, strengths-based therapy plan, children make meaningful progress.

How the two are managed together

Epilepsy is more common in autistic children than in the general population, and it is a medical priority — any suspected seizure, staring spells, sudden stiffening or jerking, or loss of awareness needs prompt review by a paediatric neurologist, who may arrange an EEG and prescribe and monitor anti-seizure medication.

Once seizures are understood and being managed, developmental support carries on in parallel:

  • Coordination first — your neurologist, paediatrician and therapy team share one picture of your child, so therapy timing respects medication effects, sleep and post-seizure recovery.
  • Therapy continuesspeech and communication support, occupational therapy and behaviour-and-learning support all proceed, paced to your child's alertness and energy on a given day.
  • Watch the overlaps — sleep, attention and some behaviours can be influenced by both the epilepsy and its medication; sharing detailed observations helps the team adjust well.
  • Family knows the plan — you should always know what a seizure looks like for your child, what to do, and when to seek urgent help.

This is a low-drama, high-coordination situation: medical safety and developmental growth run on the same track, in the same direction.

The Pinnacle way

A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from an app or an online form, and always alongside your child's medical team. Our role is the developmental side of the plan: a clear baseline through the clinician-administered AbilityScore®, coordinated therapy support, and a family that always knows the next step. Begin [here](/).

Trusted sources

World Health Organization ICD-11 framework for neurodevelopmental and neurological conditions; American Academy of Pediatrics guidance on autism and co-occurring conditions; NICE guidance on epilepsy management in children.

Next step — Keep seizure care with your neurologist, and [book a developmental assessment](/) so therapy and medical care work as one plan.

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

Staring spells, sudden stiffening or jerking, brief loss of awareness, or any seizure-like event — note what it looked like, how long it lasted, and what your child was doing, and share this with your neurologist promptly.

Try this at home

Keep one simple shared note — seizures, sleep, energy and any medication changes. Bring it to both medical and therapy visits so the whole team sees the same picture.

Trusted sources

Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-11 · 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

Which comes first — seizure treatment or autism therapy?

Seizures are a medical priority and are managed first by a paediatric neurologist, but developmental therapy does not stop. The two run in parallel, with therapy paced around your child's medication, sleep and recovery.

Can therapy continue while my child is on anti-seizure medication?

Yes. Therapy continues alongside medication. Some medicines can affect alertness or energy, so the therapy team adjusts pacing on the day and shares observations with your neurologist.

Is epilepsy more common in autistic children?

Epilepsy occurs more often in autistic children than in the general population. This is why prompt neurology review for any suspected seizure is important, alongside ongoing developmental support.

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