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20 Sep
Dad's Epilepsy Med Use Won't Harm His Kids: Study

Dad's Epilepsy Med Use Won't Harm His Kids: Study

Would-be dads don’t have to worry that taking the epilepsy drug valproate will result in children with birth defects, a new review concludes.

Valproate,...

22 Jul
Scientists May Have Spotted Way to Predict Seizures

Scientists May Have Spotted Way to Predict Seizures

The risk of seizures within the next 24 hours can be predicted by watching for abnormal brain activity patterns in people with epilepsy, a new study finds.

The storm of brain activity that characterized a seizure is presaged by abnormal communication between specific are...

24 Jun
Anti- Seizure Meds Are Crucial, But Can Trigger Severe Reactions

Anti- Seizure Meds Are Crucial, But Can Trigger Severe Reactions

Specific steps can be taken to reduce the risk of potentially fatal reactions to anti-seizure medications, researchers report in a new review.

Performing blood tests, asking patients about risk factors and modifying dosages all can reduce reaction risk for drugs that mil...

20 Jun
Could Blood Pressure Meds Help Prevent Adult Epilepsy?

Could Blood Pressure Meds Help Prevent Adult Epilepsy?

A class of blood pressure medications appears to also help lower seniors' risk of developing epilepsy, a new study finds.

The drugs, called angiotensin recept...

30 May
Will Epilepsy Meds Taken in Pregnancy Affect a Child's Creativity?

Will Epilepsy Meds Taken in Pregnancy Affect a Child's Creativity?

Newer epilepsy drugs taken while pregnant won't affect the creative thinking of children, an effect that had been observed in older medications, a new study reports...

16 May
Stroke, Migraine, Alzheimer's: Climate Change Will Likely Make Them Worse

Stroke, Migraine, Alzheimer's: Climate Change Will Likely Make Them Worse

Climate change is likely to make brain conditions like stroke, migraine, Alzheimer's disease, epilepsy and multiple sclerosis even worse, a new review warns.

...

06 May
ERs Often Missing Epilepsy in Kids With 'Non-Motor' Seizures

ERs Often Missing Epilepsy in Kids With 'Non-Motor' Seizures

Two-thirds of kids who suffer a subtle type of epileptic seizure go undiagnosed when they seek emergency room treatment, new research shows.

"We do not know how many people are walking around with seizures that they are unaware of, and we are unaware of," said researcher...

02 May
Sleep Apnea Linked With Late-Life Epilepsy

Sleep Apnea Linked With Late-Life Epilepsy

Add one more damaging consequence of sleep apnea to the list: New research suggests it's related to late-life epilepsy.

Late-onset epilepsy is defined as seizures that tend to begin only after the age of 60.

The condition might be related to underlying heart or b...

17 Apr
New Brain Target Key to Easing Tough-to-Treat Epilepsy

New Brain Target Key to Easing Tough-to-Treat Epilepsy

Some people with tough-to-treat epilepsy might benefit if doctors target a brain region newly linked to the disorder, a new study suggests.

Seizures declined by 83% after a patient underwent

21 Mar
Common Epilepsy, Migraine Drug Won't Raise Odds for Autism in Offspring

Common Epilepsy, Migraine Drug Won't Raise Odds for Autism in Offspring

A common antiseizure drug used to treat epilepsy, migraines and bipolar disorder does not appear to increase the risk of autism for kids exposed to it in the womb, ...

29 Feb
Service Dogs May Lessen Seizure Frequency in Folks With Epilepsy

Service Dogs May Lessen Seizure Frequency in Folks With Epilepsy

Perhaps by reducing anxiety, a service dog can help reduce seizures in people with tough-to-treat epilepsy, a new study finds.

A group of 25 study participants had an average 31% fewer seizures after months of owning a service dog trained to help people with epilepsy.

06 Dec
Spotting Epilepsy in Kids Isn't Always Easy: Know the Signs

Spotting Epilepsy in Kids Isn't Always Easy: Know the Signs

Neurologist Dr. Deborah Holder says she often has parents come to her with kids who've experienced what they call "funny spells."

"Sometimes I start talking to a parent and find out the paren...

05 Dec
Cognitive Decline May Come Earlier for People With Epilepsy

Cognitive Decline May Come Earlier for People With Epilepsy

People with epilepsy suffer quicker declines in thinking than people without the brain disorder, particularly if they also have risk factors like high blood pressure or diabetes, a new study finds.

The difference was significant: Over the course of the 14-year study, tho...

05 Dec
Surgery Helps Kids With Drug-Resistant Epilepsy, But Race Could Hinder Access

Surgery Helps Kids With Drug-Resistant Epilepsy, But Race Could Hinder Access

Black, Hispanic and low-income kids are less likely to receive surgery that can treat their drug-resistant epilepsy, a new study finds.

Researchers discovered that children on anti-seizure drugs who received vagus nerve stimulation were 35% more likely to be alive after ...

04 Dec
Teens With Epilepsy Face Higher Odds for Eating Disorders

Teens With Epilepsy Face Higher Odds for Eating Disorders

Teenagers with epilepsy are more likely to have an eating disorder than those not suffering from the brain disease, a new study shows.

About 8.4% of children ages 10 to 19 treated at a Boston epilepsy clinic had eating disorders, three times the national average of 2.7% ...

02 Nov
Could You Recognize the More Subtle Signs of a Seizure?

Could You Recognize the More Subtle Signs of a Seizure?

A seizure doesn't always look like what you see in the movies, but a new survey finds most Americans don't know what the more subtle signs of seizures are.

"Anything that interrupts your brain's circuit can cause seizures, from tumors, infections and strokes to high or l...

10 Oct
Experimental Drug Could Rein in Epilepsy Seizures

Experimental Drug Could Rein in Epilepsy Seizures

For people with tough-to-treat epilepsy, seizures can be both frightening and dangerous, but a new experimental pill may bring significant relief to over one-third of them.

Dubbed XEN1101, the new drug reduced the frequency of seizures by more than 50%, or even eliminate...

09 Jun
Seizures While Driving Highlight Importance of Early  Diagnosis of Epilepsy

Seizures While Driving Highlight Importance of Early  Diagnosis of Epilepsy

Before learning they had epilepsy, about 5% of people who have what's called focal epilepsy had a seizure while driving, new research suggests.

"Seizures while driving pose substantial risks for those experiencing them and for others on the road,"said study author

25 May
Alzheimer's Genes Might Also Raise Odds for Epilepsy

Alzheimer's Genes Might Also Raise Odds for Epilepsy

People with a genetic predisposition to Alzheimer's disease may have an increased risk of epilepsy, a new study says. And folks with a certain type of epilepsy may have higher odds of developing Alzheimer's disease.

Having Alzheimer's was linked to a 5.3% increased risk...

20 Apr
Neighborhoods May Matter When It Comes to Epilepsy

Neighborhoods May Matter When It Comes to Epilepsy

For people with epilepsy, living in lower-income neighborhoods is associated with worse mental functioning, new research suggests.

For the study, the researchers looked at the memory, thinking ability and mental health of people with epilepsy, and found differences based...

30 Jan
Fear of Public Spaces Is Common in People With Epilepsy

Fear of Public Spaces Is Common in People With Epilepsy

Many adults with epilepsy have agoraphobia, or a fear of public places, new research suggests.

That impacts quality of life and is something doctors should include in other screening that looks for anxiety or depression, the investigators said.

"We know that agora...

12 Jan
Black, Hispanic People With Epilepsy Often Miss Out on Latest Meds

Black, Hispanic People With Epilepsy Often Miss Out on Latest Meds

American adults who have epilepsy and are Black or Hispanic are less likely than white adults to be prescribed the latest medications, according to new research.

"While finding the right medication is often a trial-and-error process that is based on the individual, studi...

05 Dec
Severe Seizures Are Rising, Especially Among Minorities

Severe Seizures Are Rising, Especially Among Minorities

Growing numbers of Americans are suffering prolonged, life-threatening seizures known as status epilepticus, and Black people are nearly twice as likely to experience these seizures as white people.

These are the main findings from new research looking at hospitaliz...

05 Dec
Vicious Cycle: Epilepsy Seizures Could Encourage More Seizures

Vicious Cycle: Epilepsy Seizures Could Encourage More Seizures

Seizures tend to get progressively worse over time in people with epilepsy, and a new study in mice suggests why that might be the case.

Seizures appear to prompt the brains of mice to produce more myelin, the insulating layer around nerve cells, researchers from Stanfor...

02 Dec
Seizures Seem Tied to Faster Decline in People With Dementia

Seizures Seem Tied to Faster Decline in People With Dementia

Dementia patients who suffer from seizures tend to decline faster and die younger, according to a new study that urges caregivers to watch for these sudden brain changes.

"Our hope is that controlling seizures by prescribing antiseizure medications to these patients will...

02 Dec
Cost of Epilepsy Meds Continues to Soar

Cost of Epilepsy Meds Continues to Soar

Costs for epilepsy medications in the United States are skyrocketing, outpacing inflation and straining federal insurers Medicare and Medicaid, according to new research.

Spending on antiseizure medications more than doubled in eight years for the government insurers, la...

17 Nov
Seizure Risk Rises in Months After COVID

Seizure Risk Rises in Months After COVID

A bout of COVID-19, even a milder one, may raise the risk of having a seizure in the next six months, a large new study suggests.

Researchers found that of over 300,000 Americans who had suffered a case of COVID-19 or the flu, COVID sufferers were 55% more likely to be d...

29 Sep
Weight-Loss Surgery Linked to New-Onset Epilepsy

Weight-Loss Surgery Linked to New-Onset Epilepsy

Weight-loss surgery can change a person's life and health, but new research warns it might also come with a slight risk of developing epilepsy.

People who had the surgery had a 45% relative increased risk of developing

06 Sep
Could High-Dose Folic Acid Raise COVID Risks?

Could High-Dose Folic Acid Raise COVID Risks?

Folic acid, a B vitamin that's used widely to fortify foods and lower the risk of birth defects, may carry a hidden risk for those who have to take huge quantities of it: A new study shows those folks were more likely to get COVID-19 and to die from it.

"We examined whet...

18 Aug
Pregnancy Can Be Anxious Time for Women With Epilepsy

Pregnancy Can Be Anxious Time for Women With Epilepsy

Pregnant women with epilepsy battle anxiety and depression more often than their peers who aren't pregnant or don't have epilepsy, a new study reveals.

"The good news is we did not find that pregnant women with epilepsy were any more likely to have episodes of

16 Jun
Cost of Brand-Name Epilepsy Meds Is Soaring

Cost of Brand-Name Epilepsy Meds Is Soaring

Managing epilepsy is an increasingly expensive process in the United States, with prices of brand-name anti-seizure drugs nearly quadrupling over eight years, a new study finds.

From 2010 to 2018, the cost of brand-named epilepsy drugs, including meds like Vimpat (lacosa...

12 May
No Link Between Antidepressants in Pregnancy, Epilepsy in Children

No Link Between Antidepressants in Pregnancy, Epilepsy in Children

There's good news for women with a mental health condition: Taking antidepressants early in pregnancy doesn't increase a baby's risk of having epilepsy or seizures, researchers say.

"The findings of this study are very important," said study co-author Ayesha Sujan of Ind...

09 May
Some Health Conditions Greatly Raise Drowning Risks

Some Health Conditions Greatly Raise Drowning Risks

With summer comes warm weather and swimming. But for some people, knowing how to swim may not be enough to ensure their safety.

That's because certain medical conditions bump up the risk for drowning in a big way, according to a new Canadian study.

About one in th...

15 Feb
Scientists Pinpoint Why Epilepsy Seizures Rise in Pregnancy

Scientists Pinpoint Why Epilepsy Seizures Rise in Pregnancy

Many women with epilepsy have breakthrough seizures when they get pregnant, and researchers say they've figured out why.

Their new study shows that pregnan...

24 Jan
Brain Implant for Adults With Epilepsy Can Help Kids, Too

Brain Implant for Adults With Epilepsy Can Help Kids, Too

A brain implant that helps control severe epilepsy in adults may do the same for children who suffer from unrelenting seizures, new research suggests.

The study is one of the first to examine the

28 Dec
New Clues to Sudden Unexplained Deaths in Young Kids

New Clues to Sudden Unexplained Deaths in Young Kids

Every year in the United States, a few hundred children die suddenly and without explanation. Now researchers have found gene variants that may contribute to some of those tragic deaths.

The hope, experts said, is that understanding the underlying mechanisms will eventua...

20 Dec
Scientists Find Clue to Links Between Autism, Epilepsy

Scientists Find Clue to Links Between Autism, Epilepsy

Kids with autism have low levels of a protein that quiets overactive brain cells, which may explain why so many have epilepsy, according to a new study.

Because the protein can be detected in cerebrospinal fluid, it may have promise as a marker to diagnose

15 Dec
Medical Marijuana May Help Ease Severe Epilepsy in Kids: Study

Medical Marijuana May Help Ease Severe Epilepsy in Kids: Study

Kids with severe epilepsy may take multiple medications and follow special diets, yet still suffer seizures. Now a small study suggests medical marijuana may sometimes help when other therapies fail.

British researchers found that medical pot slashed seizures by almost 9...

07 Dec
What's Behind Unexplained Epilepsy in Kids? A Gene Test May Tell

What's Behind Unexplained Epilepsy in Kids? A Gene Test May Tell

Genetic testing can help guide management and treatment of unexplained epilepsy in children, new research suggests.

"A genetic diagnosis impacted medical management for nearly three out of four children in our study," said study author Dr. Isabel Haviland. She's a postdo...

06 Dec
Lifetime Spent With Epilepsy Ages the Brain, Study Finds

Lifetime Spent With Epilepsy Ages the Brain, Study Finds

People with a longtime history of epilepsy show signs of rapid brain aging that may raise their odds for developing dementia down the road.

This is the key finding of new research reporting that the brains of people with epilepsy that began in childhood appear to be abou...

17 Nov
Coming Soon: A Wearable Device to Predict Epileptic Seizures

Coming Soon: A Wearable Device to Predict Epileptic Seizures

Claire Wiedmaier experiences epileptic seizures so bad that she's broken teeth while in their grip.

"I have some fake teeth. I broke my two bottom front teeth," said Wiedmaier, 23, of Ankeny, Iowa, who these days can expect to have at least four seizures a month.

K...

08 Sep
Pet Dogs Can Alert Owners to Epileptic Seizures

Pet Dogs Can Alert Owners to Epileptic Seizures

Sit. Fetch. Stay.

Detect seizure.

Yes, you read that correctly.

While many dogs are adept at following basic instructions such as "sit" and "roll over" with some practice and the promise of a treat, new research shows dogs can detect seizures by scent up to a...

07 Sep
Therapeutic Brain Implant Won't Alter Personality in Epilepsy Patients: Study

Therapeutic Brain Implant Won't Alter Personality in Epilepsy Patients: Study

Implanted brain stimulation devices used to treat epilepsy won't turn patients into someone they don't recognize, a small study shows.

"We found that the brain implants did not transform patients' sense of self or personality. Neither the long-term implantation of the el...

06 Sep
Insights Into Genes Driving Epilepsy Could Help With Treatment

Insights Into Genes Driving Epilepsy Could Help With Treatment

Danish researchers have found genetic causes for epilepsy in half of children they studied and said half of those could be treated with targeted therapies.

That's the upshot of genetic testing of 290 children born between 2006 and 2011. Some had been diagnosed with epile...