According to the EEG report you provided, the child may have benign central-middle temporal lobe epilepsy (Rolandic epilepsy), also known as benign partial seizure or idiopathic focal epilepsy. This type of epilepsy is idiopathic epilepsy, which usually has a good prognosis and usually stops around puberty. It has the following characteristics: 1, onset age: mostly between 2- 14 years old, especially between 5- 10 years old. 2. EEG has typical characteristics: bilateral or unilateral spikes and sharp waves are scattered or continuously distributed in the central-middle temporal area, and the sleep period is obviously increased. 3. Seizures usually occur in sleep, usually manifested as unilateral facial muscle rigidity or clonus and salivation, and a few are somatic sensory symptoms, such as abnormal sensation of one cheek, gum, tongue or lip, which can occasionally spread to face and upper limbs and progress to generalized tonic-clonic seizures. There is no abnormality in nervous system examination and normal intelligence. The imaging examination was normal. If diagnosed as benign partial epilepsy in children, it will be relieved in early adolescence with the growth of age and the maturity of the brain. Benign epilepsy "benign epilepsy in children's central temporal region" is an empirical name for a kind of epilepsy in children when medicine was relatively underdeveloped many years ago. Children with this kind of epilepsy rarely have seizures in childhood, and even if they do, they are mostly in the process of sleep. Seizures will stop in adulthood whether they are treated or not. So it's called benign. But in fact, 20% of children get worse as adults. Our epilepsy center is against calling children without in-depth examination benign epilepsy in general. According to your child's current situation, it is recommended to see the epilepsy clinic to adjust the drug treatment plan and not consider surgery for the time being.
(Dr. Mei Zhen from Fuzhou General Hospital solemnly reminds me that because I can't see the patient in person, I can't fully understand the condition. The above suggestions are for reference only. Please go to the hospital for specific diagnosis and treatment under the guidance of a doctor! )