Overview
A seizure is a sudden, uncontrolled burst of abnormal electrical activity in the brain that can cause changes in movement, sensation, awareness, or behavior. Depending on which part of the brain is involved, seizures may produce convulsions, brief lapses of attention, unusual sensations, or altered consciousness. They can result from epilepsy or from other causes such as head injury, infection, stroke, fever, or metabolic disturbances, and their management typically centers on identifying the cause and reducing seizure frequency. This peer-reviewed, open-access research collection addresses seizures and epilepsy from clinical and investigative angles. Published studies have evaluated dexamethasone pulse therapy in refractory childhood seizure disorders, explored deep brain stimulation as a target for epilepsy treatment, and examined the recognition of non-epileptic seizures alongside epilepsy. Additional work has assessed the knowledge and attitudes of primary school teachers toward epilepsy and reviewed genetic polymorphisms in patients with epilepsy. Together these contributions span treatment, neuromodulation, genetics, diagnosis, and community awareness, providing readers with a grounded, evidence-based reference on seizures, their causes, and the approaches used to diagnose and manage them.
Research published in this journal
12 peer-reviewed articles, ranked by relevance. Each links to its DOI.
How this research is being cited
The 12 articles above have been cited 37 times in the scholarly literature. Citation data via OpenAlex and Crossref, updated Jun 2026.
-
Seth Selassie Dzah et al. · 2025 · Epilepsy & Behavior
-
2025 · Epilepsy & Behavior
-
2025 · PLOS One
-
2025 · PLoS ONE
-
2025 · Clinical Epileptology
-
2025 · Journal of Trauma and Injury
-
2025 · Frontiers in Surgery
-
Rudolf Korinthenberg et al. · 2024 · Epilepsia
A sample of recent works citing this journal's research on Seizure, linking to each citing work.