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