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Elucidating the visual phenomena in epilepsy: A mini review
Enes Akyuz
, Alina Arulsamy
, Shams Hasanli
, Elif Bilge Yilmaz
,
Mohd Farooq Shaikh
Dentistry and Medical Sciences
University of Health Sciences
Monash University Malaysia
Research output
:
Contribution to journal
›
Review article
›
peer-review
9
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Keyphrases
Mini
100%
Epilepsy
100%
Visual Phenomena
100%
Patients with Epilepsy
37%
Seizure
25%
Comorbidity
12%
Quality of Life
12%
Blindness
12%
Risk Reduction
12%
Ophthalmological
12%
Visual Symptoms
12%
Ictal
12%
Neurological Diseases
12%
Vision Impairment
12%
Lack of Understanding
12%
Visual Hallucinations
12%
Narrative Review
12%
Preictal
12%
Seizure Onset
12%
Occipital Lobe
12%
Therapeutic Efficiency
12%
Mistreatment
12%
Antiseizure Medication
12%
Common Epilepsy
12%
Amaurosis
12%
Phenomena-based
12%
Postictal Period
12%
Epilepsy Type
12%
Acute Visual Loss
12%
Vision Deficits
12%
Occipital Lobe Epilepsy
12%
Seizure Focus
12%
Mini-narratives
12%
Temporal Lobe
12%
Visual Aura
12%
Visual Complications
12%
Visual Disturbance
12%
Temporal Lobe Epilepsy
12%
Medicine and Dentistry
Epileptic Seizure
100%
Patient with Epilepsy
75%
Visual Impairment
50%
Occipital Lobe
50%
Drug Therapy
25%
Diagnostic Error
25%
Temporal Lobe
25%
Neurologic Disease
25%
Ictal
25%
Quality of Life
25%
Temporal Lobe Epilepsy
25%
Vision Disorder
25%
Visual Hallucination
25%
Auras
25%
Comorbidity
25%
Neuroscience
Occipital Lobe
100%
Nervous System Disorder
50%
Temporal Lobe
50%
Auras
50%
Antiseizure Medication
50%
Ictal
50%
Visual Hallucination
50%
Temporal Lobe Epilepsy
50%
Comorbidity
50%