Some types of Epilepsy are associated with speech and language difficulties. Epilepsy can result in a temporary loss of function in one or more areas of the brain. If the areas of the brain responsible for understanding and communication are affected, speech and language difficulties can occur.

Does epilepsy delay speech?

Language and communication problems Some children with epilepsy have difficulties with communication because of problems in areas of the brain that support language. Examples of problems with speech and language include: difficulty understanding and remembering what you hear and/or what you read.

Can a seizure stop you from talking?

You may keep having some symptoms even after the seizure activity in your brain has stopped. This is because some symptoms are after-effects of a seizure, like sleepiness, confusion, certain movements or being unable to move, and difficulty talking or thinking normally.

Can epilepsy medication affect speech?

Medications also can cause language disturbances. Some people who take Topamax (topiramate), for instance, experience problems with speech and language (especially word-finding) that go away when the Topamax is stopped or the dosage is lowered.

What is a speech seizure?

Focal cognitive seizure with conduction dysphasia / aphasia – the onset of inability to repeat speech that is heard, due to failure to encode phonological information, in the setting of intact auditory comprehension (full understanding of what is heard), and fluent speech production (subject to paraphrasic errors).

Is epilepsy on the spectrum?

Epilepsy can be described as a spectrum disorder. Like autism, the disorder is multifactorial, multifaceted, and varies in severity from individual to individual.

Can a person talk during a seizure?

Patients with simple partial seizures remain awake and aware throughout the seizure, and some patients can even talk during the episode.

Does epilepsy cause aphasia?

Different types of aphasia may be caused by lesions in different regions of the brain (2). Ictal or postictal aphasia, also known as epileptic aphasia, occurs following epileptic seizures and is a common event (3). Aphasia may resolved with the end of epilepsy.

Why is my speech not clear?

Usually, a nerve or brain disorder has made it difficult to control the tongue, lips, larynx, or vocal cords, which make speech. Dysarthria, which is difficulty pronouncing words, is sometimes confused with aphasia, which is difficulty producing language. They have different causes.