Pediatric Epilepsy
Epilepsy is a neurological disorder characterized by the presence of recurrent or repeated seizures or a tendency to have recurrent seizures. If your child is living with epilepsy, you may be worried about how it will affect their progress in school, what will trigger the next seizure, medical complications of having epilepsy and how epilepsy may affect your child's development. For children with epilepsy, timely and accurate diagnosis in combination with effective treatment can be life-changing.
While many children with epilepsy will thrive despite their diagnosis, for some children epilepsy can significantly impair their medical health, academic performance and psychological and social development. NewYork-Presbyterian’s Pediatric Epilepsy Program offers a multidisciplinary team of specialists that bring innovative and comprehensive care to children with epilepsy. The goal of this team is to provide prompt and accurate evaluation of children with epilepsy and and devise an effective treatment plan that addresses these problems early. Regardless of whether a child has been newly diagnosed or has a history of hard to manage epilepsy, comprehensive epilepsy care that provides seizure freedom has been shown to change a child’s outcome.
About Our Program
The NewYork-Presbyterian Epilepsy Centers, operating across NewYork-Presbyterian Morgan Stanley Children's Hospital and NewYork-Presbyterian Komansky Children's Hospital, are among the most active programs on the East Coast and are major referral centers for the treatment of children with hard-to-control seizures. We are distinguished by a comprehensive and multidisciplinary approach and excellent success in the use of innovative approaches to minimize the impact of seizures on a child’s development and well-being.
We take a stepwise approach to managing seizures, tailoring therapy to the unique needs of your child that take into account other factors — such as other medical diagnoses, lifestyle, stress, sleep habits, and diet — that may trigger your child's seizures. Our goal is to offer the most advanced treatments at the appropriate time to give children the best opportunity for seizure freedom and long term success.
Our patients range in age from newborn to young adults. While our specialists work with you and your child to build the skills needed for them to navigate their condition and advocate for their own healthcare needs as they get older, we also work with our adult epilepsy colleagues to ensure that young adult patients can transition seamlessly into NewYork-Presbyterian’s renowned adult epilepsy care programs if needed.

What is Epilepsy?
Epilepsy is a brain condition that results in ongoing seizures and is one of the most common neurological disorders. When a child has repeated seizures that are not associated with fever, trauma, or other temporary conditions known to cause seizures, the child is said to have epilepsy.
Epilepsy can be categorized as either focal or generalized, Seizures in focal epilepsy begin in a specific area of the brain. Seizures in generalized epilepsy affect multiple sites in the brain or both sides of the brain simultaneously. Understanding if a child’s epilepsy is due to a focal brain problem or is generalized is an important first step in developing the best treatment plan and guides which medicine may be recommended or what other treatments may be possible if medicines do not control the seizures.
Epilepsy can also be categorized by the area of the brain where seizures begin, as in temporal lobe epilepsy, frontal lobe epilepsy, occipital lobe epilepsy, parietal lobe epilepsy, and insula. While seizures can begin in one area of the brain based on the cause of a child’s epilepsy, if left untreated they can involve multiple other areas of the brain resulting in greater brain dysfunction.
Seizures in children often begin early in life, and even if seizures appear mild, there is a risk of cumulative disruption to a child’s development over time. Seizures should therefore be treated as early as possible to prevent uncontrolled seizures and consequences as a result of the unpredictable nature of seizures, such as injuries from fall, respiratory or cardiac rhythm abnormalities, and aspiration.
Causes of Pediatric Epilepsy
Pediatric epilepsy may be inherited due to genetic causes, or as the result of a brain malformation (cortical dysplasia),or may develop after an accident or injury. It may also be caused by an infection effecting brain (such as meningitis, encephalitis), a tumor, or a vascular anomaly such as an arteriovenous malformation (AVM). The following are some commonly known causes of pediatric seizure disorder that, in some cases, can be successfully treated with surgery and/or medication.
What We Treat
At NewYork-Presbyterian, we have expertise in all areas of epilepsy, particularly in treating early onset epilepsy and refractory epilepsy. These include:
- New onset seizures
- Infantile spasms
- Newborn seizures
- Lennox Gastaut Syndrome
- Tuberous Sclerosis Complex (TSC)
- Seizures from cortical dysplasia
- Rasmussen encephalitis or mesial temporal sclerosis
- Autoimmune epilepsy
- Hemimegalencephaly, a rare neurological condition in which one side of the brain is abnormally larger than the other
- Dravet Syndrome/PCDH1
- Sturge-Weber Syndrome
- Angelman Syndrome
- Seizures secondary to stroke or vascular malformations
- STXBP1-related epileptic encephalopathy
- SLC6A1, a neurodevelopmental disorder that causes epilepsy
Contact Us
Call for an Appointment
NewYork-Presbyterian Morgan Stanley Children’s Hospital
NewYork-Presbyterian Komansky Children’s Hospital
Related Links
NYP/Weill Cornell Epilepsy Center
Columbia Comprehensive Epilepsy Center
Columbia Neurosurgeons - Department of Neurosurgery
NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia - Department of Neurology
Weill Cornell Brain and Spine Center - Department of Neurosurgery
NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell - Department of Neurology