The Science of Seizures

Welcome to the Coping With Epilepsy Forums

Welcome to the Coping With Epilepsy forums - a peer support community for folks dealing (directly or indirectly) with seizure disorders. You can visit the forum page to see the list of forum nodes (categories/rooms) for topics.

Please have a look around and if you like what you see, please consider registering an account and joining the discussions. When you register an account and log in, you may enjoy additional benefits including no ads, access to members only (ie. private) forum nodes and more. Registering an account is free - you have nothing to lose!

Nope, my bed is wood and the house is wood too (lifted up off the ground on wooden stilts as most houses are here where it rains a lot)

I will look into those canopies.

Definitely not sticking anything in an outlet.

My father was an electrical engineer who taught me the basics while working on household projects over the years. He also taught me a healthy appreciation for the power of electricity when it goes wrong.
 
I just love opening the computer, bleary and clueless, first thing in the morning, to read that you do not stick anything into any electrical outlet -- it is a GREAT way to start the day. I laughed and laughed and THEN I got my coffee! I also want to mention that I do not have experience with graphite in paint, but I have a lot of experience with working with graphite to draw. I avoid graphite that is unconfined by sticks because it is so hard to control -- the stuff is finer than silica. I don't even like using it in sticks. It is filthy -- can get into everything and ruin everything forever. If I find anything out about graphite in paint, I will post.
 
Last edited:
Bidwell,

I was of course only referring to the third half-circle grounding insert to be perfectly clear. There is insufficient voltage there to power much of anything (normally). At least you got a laugh out of it. I can see how it can be taken that way. I hope I did not offend AlohaBird with my statement.

I read up about an ozone box. I have an electronic air cleaner attached to my furnace that cleans the air nicely. I am interested in the neurologist you mentioned in one of your posts.
 
Last edited:
This is all VERY interesting. My husband teaches electricity, and about Tesla, to high school students. He understands it soooo well, and he's tried to explain electricity to me, in particular batteries, but for some reason I just don't get it. Electricity is one of those mysteries of the universe in my mind.

That said, what Michael is doing when he drives makes total sense! I understand the electricity in, electricity out concept. What I don't understand is what makes it in the beginning. How does an electric eel make that electricity? How do they regulate it? And, the sort of silly question, what does an electric eel with epilepsy look like? It would have to be very dangerous to be around! :D

The other question I have after reading this is why have the majority of the drugs I take for e been sedative in nature? Does something that's sedated really produce less electricity, or is it just less noticeable when they do because of their calm?

Fascinating conversation, though! Thank you, Michael!
 
What I don't understand is what makes it in the beginning. How does an electric eel make that electricity? How do they regulate it? And, the sort of silly question, what does an electric eel with epilepsy look like? It would have to be very dangerous to be around! :D

The other question I have after reading this is why have the majority of the drugs I take for e been sedative in nature? Does something that's sedated really produce less electricity, or is it just less noticeable when they do because of their calm?

Fascinating conversation, though! Thank you, Michael!

What I can easily address is that, according to my understanding, AED's are ion channel blockers, and therefore prevent intracelluar polarity changes. They are inhibitors, antagonists, "coolers" to electrical activity in the brain, and are subsequently sedative. Electricity does not flow as well when it is cold, which is why cars are less likely to start in the wintertime. So, you are right.

In a car, the battery provides the electrical energy, to turn the starter, which then engages the flywheel, which is connected to the crankshaft, which then engages the camshaft...the electrical energy is converted to mechanical energy, thus making the car run.

Our bodies are like batteries. The electrical signals in the brain lead to mechanical energy in our bodies through chemical reactions, the reaction of atoms and molecules of differing electrical charges. Food ingestion is one aspect of what helps to drive these chemical reactions in us.

It is the intracelluar polarity changes which create electric potential through the reaction of cations and anions. These polarity changes are action potentials which must them be released, into either more electricity, or converted into mechanical energy. When people are having seizures, the electrical energy in the brain is released creating mechanical energy in the body, which creates movement, or shaking, etc.

It might help to think of electricity as two buckets with differing levels of water in it. The bucket with more water in it (the positive side) will want to flow into the bucket with less water in it (the negative side) until both levels are the same. This is what happens with elements in the periodic table, as well as with atoms, proteins, and moldecules, to name a few, in our bodies. There are certain atoms which have electrons to give (positive side) which are transferred to atoms which are short a few electrons (negative side). It is this transfer which creates electricity. Batteries, unless they are rechargeable, lose this difference potential over time.

Anythiing along the electromagnetic spectrum emits some sort of energy, which is our external source of energy. I have a copy of the electromagnetic spectrum handy, as well as a periodic table.

If there are things I am unfamiliar with, I either need repetition, or I need something familiar enough to bridge the familiar to the unfamiliar, until it registers.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Wow! That just explained why my body temperature is NEVER 98.6 unless I'm sick. As a child, the nurse was sure I was taking the thermometer out of my mouth when she left the room. Then she thought I wasn't keeping my mouth fully closed. Finally she stayed in the room and kept an eye on me while pretending to organize stuff. I was a VERY dutiful child, and did everything she'd told me to just so. But she was baffled why my temperature was only 96-point-something (can't remember what that something was).

Until I started into menopause, I was always cold. First to put a sweater on, last to take it off. I still do - just have to have a quick exit for those "personal summers".

Thanks Michael. Have you ever considered teaching? There are so many ways to do it - make a youtube video, write a blog, make a vlog. You could explain science to us! :)
 
Thanks, Pinkattitude. I have thought about teaching, but I am far too ill to consider it.

I typically don't have a body temperature of 98.6 either. A number of years ago, it was consistently below 97, and sometimes below 96. I actually felt better that way. I am now in the mid 97s, but my head (frontal lobe) is always warm and I always have headaches. When my body temperature was 95-97, my blood pressure was 90/60, and that actually felt better too.
 
Back
Top Bottom