Adults may mistake absence seizures in children as misbehaving or being inattentive. A child’s teacher is often the first to notice absence seizure symptoms. The child will appear temporarily absent from their body.
You can often tell if a person is experiencing an absence seizure because they become unaware of their surroundings, touch, and sound. Absence seizures typically occur suddenly and with no warning. This makes taking precautions to protect the person having a seizure important.
Risk factors for developing absence seizures include:
Focal onset seizures, or partial seizures, start on one side of your brain. The Epilepsy Foundation says that they’re the most common type of seizure in adults. These seizures are referred to as focal impaired awareness seizures when they cause changes in your level of awareness. Some focal impaired awareness seizures are misdiagnosed as absence seizures.
Some of the key features that are more typical of focal impaired awareness seizures than absence seizures include: