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  2. Neonatal seizure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neonatal_seizure

    According to the International League against Epilepsy (ILAE), seizures are defined as excessive or synchronous neuronal activity in the brain that is manifested as signs or symptoms. As per the classification system by the American Clinical Neurophysiology Society, seizures can be classified into electroclinical (clinical signs of a seizure ...

  3. Epilepsia partialis continua - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epilepsia_partialis_continua

    Although this sort of infection is uncommon it can be due to a virus, bacterium, or (very rarely) fungus. If a seizure happens during the infection itself, the person most likely does not have epilepsy but has "symptomatic seizures" or seizures occurring because of a known injury to the brain. Once the infection is stopped the seizures will stop.

  4. Focal seizure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Focal_seizure

    The symptoms of these seizures can also be misconstrued as auras, especially for epileptics with multiple types of seizure diagnosis. This is due to the varying locations of the brain in which the seizures originate (e.g., Rolandic). A simple partial seizure may go unnoticed by others or shrugged off by the patient as merely a "funny turn."

  5. Epilepsy in children - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epilepsy_in_children

    The epileptic seizure in the vast majority of pediatric epilepsy patients is ephemeral, and symptoms typically subside on their own after the seizure comes to an end, but some children experience what is known as a “seizure cluster," in which the first seizure is followed by a second episode approximately six hours later.

  6. Malignant migrating partial seizures in infancy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malignant_migrating...

    Malignant migrating partial seizures of infancy (MMPSI) is a rare epileptic syndrome that onsets before 6 months of age, commonly in the first few weeks of life. [3] Once seizures start, the site of seizure activity repeatedly migrates from one area of the brain to another, with few periods of remission in between.

  7. Frontal lobe epilepsy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frontal_lobe_epilepsy

    It is the second most common type of epilepsy after temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE), and is related to the temporal form in that both forms are characterized by partial (focal) seizures. [2] Partial seizures occurring in the frontal lobes can occur in one of two different forms: either “focal aware”, the old term was simple partial seizures ...

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