Last updated 27 Nov 2011, review date due 27 Nov 2013
During Ramadan, healthy adult Muslims are required to fast between dawn and sunset. This means that they are not allowed to take food, drink, or drugs by mouth. This can be a challenge, particularly if you have a long-term condition such as epilepsy, and need anti-epilepsy drugs more than once a day.
Recent research found that there was an increase in the number of seizures their patients with epilepsy experienced during the holy month. This increase was probably due to changes in the way their anti-epilepsy drugs were taken, sleep patterns being disturbed, going for a long time without food, and emotional stress and tiredness. These are all things that are known to trigger seizures in some people with epilepsy.
If you have epilepsy and are fasting, you may want to seek advice from your epilepsy specialist, specialist nurse or GP.
For any general information about your epilepsy and treatment, contact Epilepsy Helpline by email helpline@epilepsy.org.uk, or in the UK freephone 0808 800 5050 or text your question to 07707 805 390.
We can provide references and information on the source material we use to write our epilepsy advice and information pages. Please contact our Epilepsy Helpline by email at helpline@epilepsy.org.uk.
- Information for...
- Information on...
- Fundraise
- Donate
- Membership
- Campaigns
- Take epilepsy action campaign
- Automatic substitution of anti-epileptic drugs
- National commissioning of paediatric epilepsy surgery
- National Epilepsy Week
- Save our Sapphires, protecting all epilepsy specialist nurse posts
- Women's campaigns
- Epilepsy in England: time for change
- 'Epilepsy Aware' scheme for GP practices and pharmacies
- Campaign Supporters' Group
- Surveys
- News
- Research
- Our services
- Forum
- About us
Epilepsy advice and information
- What is epilepsy?
- Caring for a baby or young child when you have epilepsy: a detailed guide
- Children
- Depression and epilepsy
- Developing epilepsy in later life
- Driving and epilepsy
- Education
- Entitlements and benefits for people with epilepsy
- Epilepsy and learning disabilities
- Epilepsy and Travel abroad
- Epilepsy information for prisons
- Epilepsy, osteoporosis and osteomalacia
- Epilepsy: diagnosis, treatment and healthcare in the UK
- Epileptic seizures explained
- Flu and epilepsy
- Identity jewellery
- Inheritance
- Me and my dad
- Memory
- Mobile phones and epilepsy
- Photosensitive epilepsy
- Safety advice for people with epilepsy
- Sports and leisure
- Stress and epilepsy
- Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP)
- Syndromes
- The Disability Discrimination Act
- The Equality Act and epilepsy
- Vagus nerve stimulation therapy in epilepsy
- Work and epilepsy
- Women and epilepsy
- Young people and epilepsy
- Epilepsy Action and the Information Standard
- The Epilepsies: You, Epilepsy and the NICE Guideline
- Epilepsy Action Information Reviewers (EAIRs)
- Technical editing/writing and copyright
Epilepsy Helpline
- UK freephone 0808 800 5050
- International +44 113 210 8850
- Email: helpline@epilepsy.org.uk
- Twitter: epilepsyadvice
- Txt msg: 0753 741 0044 info







