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<small>As contrasting to Jackson proposal, a mainstrem of writings on genuine [[epilepsy]], or idiopathic epilepsy, (Gobber, Turner) developed where auras and, under the influence of German and French psychiatrists, physical equivalents came to be accepted, as possible, common, on even characteristic manifestation (Stauder) of 'genuine' epilepsy</small><ref>Idiopathic Generalized Epilepsies: Clinical, Experimental and Genetic Aspects Malafose et al eds.</ref>
<small>As contrasting to Jackson proposal, a mainstrem of writings on genuine [[epilepsy]], or idiopathic epilepsy, (Gobber, Turner) developed where auras and, under the influence of German and French psychiatrists, physical equivalents came to be accepted, as possible, common, on even characteristic manifestation (Stauder) of 'genuine' epilepsy</small><ref>Idiopathic Generalized Epilepsies: Clinical, Experimental and Genetic Aspects Malafose et al eds.</ref>


 
Idiopathic epilepsies are ''sui generis'' 'not preceded or occasioned by another disorder'
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Revision as of 15:54, 16 April 2016

As contrasting to Jackson proposal, a mainstrem of writings on genuine epilepsy, or idiopathic epilepsy, (Gobber, Turner) developed where auras and, under the influence of German and French psychiatrists, physical equivalents came to be accepted, as possible, common, on even characteristic manifestation (Stauder) of 'genuine' epilepsy[1]

Idiopathic epilepsies are sui generis 'not preceded or occasioned by another disorder' Q at Wikidata  Interwiki via Wikidata


  1. Idiopathic Generalized Epilepsies: Clinical, Experimental and Genetic Aspects Malafose et al eds.