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[[John Hughlings Jackson|Jackson]] demonstrated that symptoms of seizure could start in the periphery and march up (so called ''Jacksonian march'') a limb and that unilateral seizure could generalize. | [[John Hughlings Jackson|Jackson]] demonstrated that symptoms of seizure could start in the periphery and march up (so called ''Jacksonian march'') a limb and that unilateral seizure could generalize. | ||
Jackson self named uncinate seizure or middle level fit because they originate in the motor region of the central system, today popularized as '''Jacksonian seizures''' | Jackson self named uncinate seizure or middle level fit because they originate in the motor region of the central system, today popularized as '''Jacksonian seizures''' | ||
<ref>The Neuropsychology of Epilepsy.</ref> | <ref>The Neuropsychology of Epilepsy. ISBN 978-1-4899-2352-3</ref> | ||
{{Wikidata|Q7140388}} See [[Partial seizure]] | {{Wikidata|Q7140388}} See [[Partial seizure]] |
Revision as of 18:21, 19 April 2016
Jackson demonstrated that symptoms of seizure could start in the periphery and march up (so called Jacksonian march) a limb and that unilateral seizure could generalize. Jackson self named uncinate seizure or middle level fit because they originate in the motor region of the central system, today popularized as Jacksonian seizures [1]
See Partial seizure
- ↑ The Neuropsychology of Epilepsy. ISBN 978-1-4899-2352-3