It could come from any part. As an example, if someone had a small injury on some part of their brain, that could disrupt normal electrical activity occasionally which can cause a seizure.
Surprisingly and fortunately the brain does not seem to get affected by epilepsy.
It is the cells in the brain that are affected.
Epilepsy is a disease caused by trauma to a spesific part of your brain, you can however be born with it as well, but it's still the same part (cell) of the brain that's damaged/ineffective.
it all depends on what type of epilepsy on witch part of the brain it effect's types of epilepsy effect both side of the brain .some are to hard to pin point
The seizures of epilepsy are due to unregulated spreading of electrical activity from one part of the brain to other parts.
There is no specific region. If there is any kind of damage, it could be in different places for different people. Not everyone that has epilepsy has brain damage and equally, not everyone that has brain damage has epilepsy.
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Epilepsy is something that affects the brain, so you cannot get epilepsy in your leg.
Epilepsy is a disease of the brain.
Epilepsy only really affects the brain. It is mainly an extra amount of electrical activity in the brain. That in turn may have an effect on other parts of the body, like physical movements in the body and people becoming unconscious.
Epileptic seizures originating in the olfactory part of the brain can create unusual or unexplained smells.
The brain is the only area affected by Epilepsy. As the brain controls many other parts of the body, other things can then be indirectly affected, like the nervous system, which is why shaking is sometimes associated with epilepsy. Seizures affect different people in different ways, so not everyone shakes when they have a seizure.