6/27/2023 0 Comments Praey for the gods all totems![]() ![]() Discuss the side-effects of your medication with your neurologist. Your ability to recall may be interrupted by your mood or by sleep disturbances.Ĭan anti-seizure medications cause memory problems?Īnti-seizure medications may affect your thinking and memory, but on the other hand, they may control your seizures, and having lots of seizures can lead to more memory loss. Perhaps the problem is emotional and not memory-based, brought on by anxiety in certain situations or by depression. an attention problem, language problem, or a visual/spatial problem) and not a true memory problem. Or perhaps you are experiencing a cognitive problem (e.g. This can interfere with attention and also, probably, with memory. Some people with epilepsy have unusual electrical activity in their brains between seizures – what is known as “inter-ictal” or “sub-clinical” activity. the hippocampus), this may be causing your problem. Or if the focus of your seizures is located deep in the temporal lobe of your brain near some of the parts that are important for memory (e.g. If a seizure is very severe and prolonged (status epilepticus) and you experience hypoxia (insufficient oxygen to the brain), this can cause secondary damage to your memory system.Īn underlying brain tumour or lesion can disrupt the memory process. Sometimes longer term memories from the period prior to the seizure are lost as well, as these memories may have not yet being fully integrated into the brain’s memory system. Tonic-clonic (grand mal) seizures in which you lose consciousness can interfere with normal brain processes and disrupt the registration phase of short-term memory. Confusion often follows a seizure, and during this foggy time new memory traces are not being laid down in the brain. Seizures interfere with memory by interfering with attention or input of information. ![]() Memory is a natural brain process that requires continuing attention and recording by parts of the brain. Or it may not actually be a memory problem at all. It may be the effects of your anti-epileptic medication. Or an underlying disorder in the brain, which causes the seizures, may be what is disrupting the memory process. Your memory process can be interfered with by epileptic seizures. Why do people with epilepsy often have memory problems? For more elaborate and individualized information it is recommended that interested people contact their own health care providers. Note: This information provides general principles only. Notes from a lecture by Clare Brandys, Ph.D., C.Psych., Psychologist, Clinical Neuropsychology.
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