The incidence of epilepsy is highest in children and in elderly people (over 60 years of age). In about 75% of cases, the first seizures occur before the age of 16 with the maximal occurrence observed before the age of 10 [1]. The problems of diagnosis and treatment of epilepsy in patients of the “transitional” age – adolescents, as well as elderly people – need more attention because these two groups go through the most vulnerable periods of their lives, both psychologically and physiologically. These problems should be approached in the way specific for each age group. For example, there are difficulties in diagnosing a particular form of epilepsy in adolescents; therefore the diagnoses of “unspecified epilepsies” are made. In these cases...