Question

A child’s fever symptoms persist and medication injections fail to alleviate them. When the fever reaches 39.7 degrees, the child experiences convulsive symptoms, vomits blood foam, and shivers continuously. The doctor diagnoses it as epilepsy. How should it be treated?

Answer

The key to treating epilepsy is to suppress the abnormal discharge of brain cells, quickly compete with neurotransmitters for inhibitory binding, and repair damaged neural cells to fundamentally cure epilepsy attacks. This treatment method successfully breaks through the traditional treatment method of only controlling but not curing, leading to complete recovery for many long-term epilepsy patients.