Epilepsy - Yale Medicine Explains
June 12, 2026Transcript
- 00:04A neuron has information
- 00:06and it goes through the
- 00:07axons, which you can think
- 00:08about as electrical wires to
- 00:11another neuron.
- 00:12Electrical impulses, they travel down
- 00:15the axon and trigger the
- 00:17release of some chemical
- 00:19neurotransmitters.
- 00:21And these neurotransmitters
- 00:22can cause either excitation or
- 00:25inhibition of the brain function.
- 00:27And it allows our brain
- 00:29cells, also called neurons, to
- 00:31communicate.
- 00:32You have over a billion
- 00:34neurons in the brain, and
- 00:35so it's pretty magical.
- 00:38So seizures are caused by
- 00:40sudden abnormal burst of electrical
- 00:42activity in the brain. And
- 00:43a seizure can look like
- 00:44almost anything. If it is
- 00:46affecting the motor areas in
- 00:48the brain, patients may notice
- 00:49some jerking movements of the
- 00:51certain part of the extremity.
- 00:53More and more brain when
- 00:54it gets involved, it causes
- 00:56loss of impairment.
- 00:59The seizure can be provoked
- 01:00or it can be unprovoked.
- 01:02Provoked seizures can occur in
- 01:04response to a specific trigger
- 01:06or a temporary condition. It
- 01:08could be high fever, low
- 01:09blood sugar, versus unprovoked seizures,
- 01:12they occur without an immediate
- 01:13trigger.
- 01:14So if you've had two
- 01:16seizures that are unprovoked, you
- 01:17have epilepsy. Or if you
- 01:19have one seizure
- 01:20and you have a structural
- 01:22problem in your brain that
- 01:23can cause another seizure, that
- 01:24is how epilepsy is defined.
- 01:30So diagnosis is so important
- 01:32because there are many different
- 01:33ways to treat seizures.
- 01:35And so understanding where they
- 01:36come from, the parts of
- 01:38the brain they affect, and
- 01:39the functions they affect
- 01:41has a direct correlation with
- 01:43what can be done.
- 01:45A brain MRI is one
- 01:46of the most useful tools
- 01:48that we have in evaluating
- 01:49a patient with epilepsy
- 01:51because it helps identify structural
- 01:53abnormalities
- 01:54in the brain. Like a
- 01:56stroke or if there is
- 01:57a brain tumor benign or
- 01:58malignant.
- 01:59So EEG is an electroencephalogram.
- 02:02It is basically measuring the
- 02:03electrical signals of the brain.
- 02:05You put some
- 02:07electrodes on the surface of
- 02:09the head
- 02:10to know where seizures are
- 02:11coming from.
- 02:13EEG is a fantastic technique,
- 02:15but it also has some
- 02:16of its limitations.
- 02:18Because when things come from
- 02:19very deep in the brain,
- 02:21it's difficult for EEG to
- 02:23accurately tell you where in
- 02:25that deep part of the
- 02:27brain
- 02:27decisions are coming from.
- 02:29So magnetoencephalography
- 02:32is another way of looking
- 02:33deep in the brain. Rather
- 02:35than electrical signals,
- 02:48referral to
- 02:51early referral to a comprehensive
- 02:53epilepsy center is the key
- 02:54to success.
- 02:57For epilepsy, the first line
- 02:58of treatment is anti seizure
- 03:01medications.
- 03:02Seventy percent of the patients
- 03:03respond very well to medications
- 03:06usually,
- 03:06and they will not have
- 03:08another seizures if they are
- 03:09taking their medicines on time.
- 03:11Now, if you've tried two
- 03:12medications
- 03:14for epilepsy and you still
- 03:16have unprovoked seizures,
- 03:18that is the definition of
- 03:20medication refractory epilepsy.
- 03:23We've learned that you can
- 03:25use surgery actually
- 03:27to treat
- 03:28these
- 03:29medication refractory seizures.
- 03:32We do have very minimally
- 03:34invasive
- 03:35technologies
- 03:36such as laser
- 03:37where through a two millimeter
- 03:40hole, we can actually
- 03:42remove
- 03:43tissue that causes seizures in
- 03:44the
- 03:45brain.
- 03:47And sometimes,
- 03:48seizures come from places
- 03:50that are extremely important
- 03:52in the brain such as
- 03:53language function.
- 03:54And so now, we have
- 03:56closed loop neuromodulation
- 03:58devices
- 03:59that will detect seizures and
- 04:00stimulate
- 04:01to short circuit them and
- 04:03so people can continue with
- 04:04their lives and and not
- 04:06lose function.
- 04:07And now, we're actually having
- 04:09newer things
- 04:10such as focused ultrasounds for
- 04:12the treatment of epilepsy.
- 04:15And it's lifeless surgery. You
- 04:17can use ultrasound
- 04:19waves to ablate regions of
- 04:22brain that could be causing
- 04:23seizures.
- 04:28So we have a really
- 04:29big research program at Yale.
- 04:31The epilepsy,
- 04:33teams are looking at, like,
- 04:34what impairs the consciousness during
- 04:36seizures. So if we can
- 04:37have a better understanding of
- 04:39consciousness, where it comes from,
- 04:41we can try to see
- 04:42how we can make our
- 04:43patients safer.
- 04:45In terms of epilepsy surgery,
- 04:47when we try to figure
- 04:48out what are the different
- 04:50zones doing, then we understand
- 04:52the epilepsy networks much better.
- 04:55At Yale, we have pioneered
- 04:58surgical
- 04:59interventions for epilepsy. We are
- 05:01involved in multiple clinical trials.
- 05:03Yale is definitely a forefront,
- 05:05a leader in the treatment
- 05:06of epilepsy.