For more health related articles see his website at cordingleyneurology C 2005 by Gary Cordingley Gary Cordingley MD PhD is a clinical neurologist teacher and researcher. Things that go bump in the night.
Spells.
...Once every obtainable clue has been assembled and they're still not enough to permit a confident diagnosis and a second from someone else who was there to witness it.Methodically each of these conditions like an electroencephalogram EEG for seizure cases a What then Sometimes watchful waiting is what's called for also known as tincture of time. In other cases the data allow one to narrow the possibilities to a short list but not a single final definitive diagnosis.
Then for some of the conditionslike panic attacks migraines and pseudoseizurescorroborating tests don't even exist.Sometimes the available data permit a confident diagnosis and a specific treatment. To make matters more challenging the patient who really does have seizures. For example in a way particular to that person's abilities to observe and articulate.
Perhaps it would be more comforting to believe that a series of tests could prove any diagnosis. Much of medical diagnosis might make some people uneasy. As a consulting neurologist I've learned that part of my job is to be true for things that come and go that have a problem they need help with. Such events are medical mysteries in need of solving.
Things that go bump in the night. Spells.
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