ADHD vs Childhood Epilepsy
ADHD vs Childhood Epilepsy in Young Children
ADHD and childhood epilepsy can both make a young child seem briefly 'absent', but they are very different. ADHD is a consistent, everyday pattern of inattention, restlessness and impulsivity that shows across settings, with the child responsive throughout. Childhood epilepsy involves episodic seizures — sudden bursts of abnormal brain electrical activity that may look like staring, unresponsiveness or jerking, with a distinct start and stop. The key clue: an inattentive child can be brought back by their name; a child in a seizure cannot. Suspected seizures need prompt neurology assessment, while attention concerns warrant a developmental check — and the two can sometimes co-exist.
Both can make a young child seem 'switched off' for a moment — but one is a difference in attention, and the other is a burst of electrical activity in the brain.
In short
ADHD (Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder) is a difference in how a child's brain manages attention, activity and impulses — they may be restless, distractible or act before thinking, all day, across many settings. Childhood epilepsy is a medical condition where brief, abnormal bursts of electrical activity in the brain cause seizures — which can sometimes look like blank staring, sudden stopping, or jerking movements. The big difference: ADHD is a consistent pattern of behaviour, while epileptic events are episodic — they come and go suddenly. Importantly, epilepsy needs prompt medical (neurology) assessment, not therapy first.How they differ in everyday life
With ADHD, a young child's challenges are present much of the time — difficulty sitting still, frequently 'losing' attention, jumping between activities, interrupting, or struggling to wait their turn. These patterns are steady, show up at home and at preschool, and the child is fully aware and responsive throughout.With childhood epilepsy, the key feature is the seizure — a discrete event. One type, called an absence seizure, can be easily mistaken for ADHD-style 'daydreaming': the child suddenly goes blank, stops mid-sentence or mid-activity for a few seconds, does not respond, then carries on as if nothing happened — often with no memory of it. Other seizures involve stiffening, jerking, lip-smacking or unusual movements. The clue is the sudden start and stop, the lack of response during the episode, and that it cannot be interrupted by calling the child's name.
A simple way to hold it in mind: an inattentive child can usually be brought back by a gentle nudge or their name; a child in an absence seizure cannot. The two can also co-exist — some children have both — which is exactly why a careful professional look matters.
When to seek help — and which kind
If you notice repeated staring spells, sudden unresponsiveness, jerking, stiffening, or unusual movements, treat this as a medical priority and see a paediatrician or child neurologist promptly — these need investigation (often including an EEG). If instead you see a steady, everyday pattern of restlessness, distractibility and impulsivity that affects play, learning and relationships, a developmental assessment for attention difficulties is the right path. When in doubt, start with a developmental check and let a clinician guide you.The Pinnacle way
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, never from an app or form. Where seizures are suspected, our team will guide you to prompt medical and neurology review first; where attention and behaviour are the focus, we support children through behavioural therapy and structured developmental help. Learn more about attention difficulties across our network.Trusted sources
The CDC and American Academy of Pediatrics on recognising ADHD and on childhood seizures and epilepsy; the World Health Organization on epilepsy as a treatable neurological condition.Next step — Seeing sudden staring or unusual movements? See a paediatrician promptly. Seeing a steady pattern of restlessness or distractibility? Book a developmental screening at your nearest Pinnacle Blooms Network centre.
What to watch
Sudden staring spells where the child cannot be roused by name, unresponsiveness, jerking or stiffening point towards possible seizures and need prompt medical review. A steady, all-day pattern of restlessness, distractibility, interrupting and difficulty waiting points more towards attention difficulties.
Try this at home
If your child 'zones out', try gently saying their name or touching their shoulder. A child who is simply distracted will usually respond and reconnect; a child who stays blank, unresponsive and then resumes as if nothing happened may be having an absence seizure — note the time and see a 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
Can ADHD be mistaken for epilepsy in young children?
Yes. Absence seizures — brief blank staring spells — can look like ADHD daydreaming. The key difference is that a distracted child can be brought back by their name or a gentle touch, while a child in a seizure cannot be roused during the episode and often has no memory of it. A clinician can distinguish them, sometimes with an EEG.
Can a child have both ADHD and epilepsy?
Yes, the two can co-exist, and children with epilepsy can have higher rates of attention difficulties. This is exactly why a careful professional assessment matters rather than assuming one explanation. Seizures are reviewed medically by a paediatrician or neurologist, while attention concerns are explored through a developmental assessment.
Which should I see a doctor about first?
If you notice sudden staring spells where your child is unresponsive, or any jerking, stiffening or unusual movements, treat it as a medical priority and see a paediatrician or child neurologist promptly. If you see a steady, everyday pattern of restlessness and distractibility instead, begin with a developmental screening.