Treatise on Poisons by Sir Robert Christison

1. The epileptic fit _is sometimes preceded by certain warnings_, such

as stupor, a sense of coldness, or creeping, or of a gentle breeze proceeding from a particular part of the body towards the head. Warnings, however, are by no means universal. M. Georget, indeed, has even stated that they do not occur in more than five cases in the hundred.[1646] But this estimate probably underrates their frequency.