“…The most common among them are: fever in children, tricyclic antidepressants, theophylline, drugs intoxications and drugs abuse, acute neurological disorders and infections (meningitis, encephalitis, stroke, head injury, brain abscess, etc. ), alcoholism, metabolic disorders (hypo/hyperglycemia, hypocalcaemia) 7 , derivative of phencyclidine-metaphit 8 , scabicides-lindane 9, 10 , sleep disturbances [11][12][13] , hyperhomocysteinemia 14 , visual stimuli 15 , stress 16 , the menstrual cycle 17 , a specific diet regimes 18,19 , vascular abnormalities, stroke sequelae and subarachnoid hemorrhage 20 . Experimental models of epilepsy are significant for resolving the mechanisms of epileptogenesis and play very important role in new antiepileptic drugs development.…”