Clinical Seizure Semiology: Localization, Lateralization, and Network Interpretation is a practical, clinically focused guide to seizure semiology for neurologists, epileptologists, trainees, and epilepsy surgery teams. Organized by lobe and sublobar localization, this structured review helps readers interpret seizures as dynamic sequences rather than isolated signs, emphasizing the critical value of the earliest symptom or first objective sign in identifying seizure onset and propagation.
Covering frontal, temporal, insular, parietal, occipital, and cingulate epilepsies, this book provides a disciplined framework for bedside and video-EEG semiologic analysis. It integrates localization, lateralization, propagation pathways, and symptomatogenic networks into a clear, usable method for clinical practice and presurgical evaluation. Special attention is given to common diagnostic pitfalls, temporal-plus and network-based epilepsies, cross-cutting lateralizing signs, and the limitations of semiology when used without EEG, imaging, neuropsychology, and multimodal correlation.
Rather than offering a simple checklist of seizure signs, this volume teaches a sequence-first method: what happened first, what happened next, and which elements most likely reflect seizure onset versus spread. The text is supported by practical workflows, sublobar matrices, sign-oriented summaries, evidence-based appendices, and quick-reference tools designed for real-world use in clinic, epilepsy monitoring units, and multidisciplinary surgical conferences.
Written for clinicians who want a more rigorous and anatomically grounded approach to seizure interpretation, Clinical Seizure Semiology shows why semiology remains one of the most valuable and cost-effective tools in modern epilepsy care. It is both a reference and a working manual for improving diagnostic precision, guiding invasive monitoring, and strengthening presurgical decision-making