toriandbilly
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Hi
This is an excerpt from a page I found online. It implies to me that this can only happen with kids, I first got E at 34 or 35 (I don't remember, surprise surprise!), there was no sign of E when I was a kid at all.
All that is said below applies to me along with Generalised T.C.s occasionally.
What is it when I have a speech arrest, what kind of seizure is it, an s.p, c.p.s or what???
Language
Speech arrest as an ictal phenomenon can be a part of benign Rolandic epilepsy (77). A seizure of this childhood syndrome may involve movements of the mouth, trembling of the chin and tongue, decreased swallowing with drooling, or difficulty in moving the tongue. Speech arrest may begin at seizure onset or evolve after the utterance of a few words. This can more often reflect a simple motor phenomenon than a language involvement.
Speech can also be affected in other childhood epileptic syndromes such as Landau-Kleffner syndrome and the syndrome of continuous spikes and waves during slow wave sleep (CSWS). Whereas the latter manifests as widespread regression, the former typically begins with auditory verbal agnosia (a dyscognitive seizure). The language disorder may be steadily progressive or become incrementally severe with relapses.
This is an excerpt from a page I found online. It implies to me that this can only happen with kids, I first got E at 34 or 35 (I don't remember, surprise surprise!), there was no sign of E when I was a kid at all.
All that is said below applies to me along with Generalised T.C.s occasionally.
What is it when I have a speech arrest, what kind of seizure is it, an s.p, c.p.s or what???
Language
Speech arrest as an ictal phenomenon can be a part of benign Rolandic epilepsy (77). A seizure of this childhood syndrome may involve movements of the mouth, trembling of the chin and tongue, decreased swallowing with drooling, or difficulty in moving the tongue. Speech arrest may begin at seizure onset or evolve after the utterance of a few words. This can more often reflect a simple motor phenomenon than a language involvement.
Speech can also be affected in other childhood epileptic syndromes such as Landau-Kleffner syndrome and the syndrome of continuous spikes and waves during slow wave sleep (CSWS). Whereas the latter manifests as widespread regression, the former typically begins with auditory verbal agnosia (a dyscognitive seizure). The language disorder may be steadily progressive or become incrementally severe with relapses.