Seizure Semiology NA-CLTM actual exam questions and answers.
Unilateral clinic activity/Jacksonian March Primary Motor Cortex Fencing/Figure 4 Supplementary Motor Mood changes, intense fright, vocalizations, autonomic signs, hypermotor Cingulate Gyrus Complex motor, olfactory aura Orbitofrontal Cortex Hypersalivation, gustatory hallucinations, facial clinic movements Frontal Operculum Contralateral numbness/tingling; may spread to adjacent areas Primary Sensory Cortex Distortions in body image, twisting/turning sensations, some visual illusions Parietal Association Areas Elementary visual aura, brief; complex visual auras are rare (usually from spread to adjacent areas) Primary Visual Cortex (Occipital Lobe) Primary gustatory cortex, cardiac arrhythmias Insular Cortex Abdominal, fear, deja vu, and autonomic auras Mesial Temporal Lobe Aura then progresses into behavioral arrest, automatism, and impaired awareness Mesial Temporal Lobe Complex visual hallucinations Lateral Temporal Lobe Auditory auras Lateral Temporal Lobe Often evolve to bilateral tonic clonic Lateral Temporal Lobe
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seizure semiology na cltm actual exam
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