Overview
If you see someone who is having a seizure, stay calm. Although seizures seem to last a long time, they usually last less than 3 minutes.
A seizure can be scary to watch, especially if you've never seen one before. A seizure temporarily interferes with muscle control, movement, speech, vision, or awareness. It may cause a person's entire body to shake for a few seconds to a few minutes, and they may lose consciousness.
Seizures can be mild to severe, and they affect people differently. Even though you may feel helpless around someone having a seizure and find it difficult to watch, there are many things you can do to help.
Time the seizure, if you can. If the seizure lasts longer than 5 minutes or the person seizing is pregnant (no matter how long the seizure lasts), call 9-1-1 or other emergency services immediately.
- Protect the person from injury.
- Keep them from falling if you can, or try to guide the person gently to the floor.
- Try to move furniture or other objects that might injure the person during the seizure.
- Try to position the person on their side so that fluid can leak out of the mouth.
- Do not force anything, including your fingers, into the person's mouth.
- Do not try to hold down the person.
This can cause injury, such as a dislocated shoulder.
- Provide a safe area where the person can rest after the seizure.
- Check the person for injuries.
- Turn the person onto their side, if you could not do so during the seizure.
- Loosen tight clothing around the person's neck and waist.
- Do not offer anything to eat or drink until the person is fully awake and alert.
- Stay with the person until they are awake and familiar with the surroundings.
Most people will be sleepy or confused after a seizure.
You may be able to provide valuable feedback to the doctor treating the person having the seizure. Try to remember:
- How the person's body moved.
- How long the seizure lasted.
- How the person acted before the seizure.
- How the person acted immediately after the seizure.
- Whether the person suffered any injuries from the seizure.
When to get emergency help
Seizures do not always require urgent care. But call 9-1-1 or other emergency services right away if:
- The person having a seizure stops breathing for longer than 30 seconds. After calling 9-1-1 or other emergency services, begin rescue breathing.
- The seizure lasts longer than 5 minutes.
- The person seizing is pregnant (no matter how long the seizure lasts).
- More than one seizure occurs within 24 hours.
- The person having a seizure does not respond normally within 1 hour.
- The person has new symptoms, such as trouble walking, speaking, or thinking clearly.
- The person has a fever.
- A seizure occurs after the person complains of a sudden, severe headache.
- A seizure follows a head injury.
- A person with diabetes has a seizure.
- A seizure occurs after eating poison or breathing fumes.
- The person complains of severe pain after waking up or develops a fever within 24 hours of the seizure.
Credits
Current as of: August 25, 2022
Author: Healthwise Staff
Medical Review:
John Pope MD - Pediatrics
Martin J. Gabica MD - Family Medicine
Kathleen Romito MD - Family Medicine
Steven C. Schachter MD - Neurology
Current as of: August 25, 2022
Author: Healthwise Staff
Medical Review:John Pope MD - Pediatrics & Martin J. Gabica MD - Family Medicine & Kathleen Romito MD - Family Medicine & Steven C. Schachter MD - Neurology