“…In cases when generalized and partialtype epilepsy are associated with symptoms of synaptic failure (Joy & Fields, 2019), neurological damage, or manifestation characterized by a hyperexcitability of indefinite duration (Hirosawa, Kikuchi, Fukai, Hino & Kitamura et al, 2018), it may lead to a clinical manifestation of the chronic stage (Kynast, Lampe, Luck, Frisch & Arelin et al, 2018). According to Reddy the variety of antiepileptic drugs, however, does not help a part of epileptic patients (Izadi, Ondek, Schedlbauer, Keselman, Shahlaie & Gurkoff, 2018) who present a form of epilepsy which fails to be fully traced in its clinical symptomatology based on the type of damage it causes (Reilly, Atkinson, Memon, Jones & Dabydeen et al, 2018) and the area in which it lies in the brain (Jones, Asato, Brown, Doss & Felton et al, 2020;Burke, Naseh, Rodriguez, Burgess & Loewenstein, 2019;Noebels, 2015). In most cases what pharmacological treatments do (Cacabelos, 2020;Mollon, Mathias, Knowles, Rodrigue & Koenis et al, 2020;Williams, 2020) is the symptomatic treatment of the concerns of the epileptic patient, who is only able to control the severity of the injury but gives little opportunity to keep the disease under control (Holmes, 2014).…”