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epilepsyaphasia

Epilepsyaphasia is a clinical phenomenon in which aphasic language disturbances accompany epileptic seizures, most often in people with focal epilepsy affecting language-dominant networks in the left hemisphere. The disturbance may occur ictally (during seizures) or postictally (after seizures) and can range from mild word-finding difficulties to more severe language breakdown.

Common manifestations include sudden anomia, paraphasias, halting or nonfluent speech, impaired naming, and, less frequently, restricted

Pathophysiology involves aberrant electrical activity in language-related cortical areas (for example, the left temporal and perisylvian

Diagnosis relies on clinical observation during seizures, supported by video electroencephalography (EEG) to localize ictal activity

Treatment focuses on controlling seizures with antiepileptic drugs, and in selected cases, epilepsy surgery or neuromodulation

comprehension
during
the
ictal
phase.
In
some
cases,
fluent
speech
is
preserved
but
semantic
or
grammatical
content
is
disrupted.
Consciousness
level
can
be
preserved,
altered,
or
reduced
depending
on
seizure
semiology
and
spread.
regions)
and
their
connections,
which
disrupt
real-time
language
processing.
Network
disruption
and
spread
to
adjacent
regions
may
contribute
to
the
spectrum
of
symptoms.
and
MRI
to
identify
structural
abnormalities.
Neuropsychological
testing
may
assess
baseline
language
function.
Differential
diagnoses
include
non-epileptic
aphasia,
transient
ischemic
attack,
stroke,
or
psychogenic
language
disturbance.
may
improve
language
outcomes
by
reducing
ictal
activity
in
language
networks.
Speech-language
therapy
can
address
residual
language
deficits.
Prognosis
varies
with
epilepsy
type
and
seizure
control;
language
disturbances
often
improve
with
effective
seizure
management,
but
persistent
deficits
may
occur
in
some
individuals.