Improvement of a patient with stuttering on levetiracetam
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Stuttering is defined as a disturbance in normal fluency and time patterning of speech characterized by frequent occurrences of one or more of the following: sound and syllable repetitions, sound prolongations, interjections, broken words, and monosyllabic whole-word repetitions. There are two kinds of stuttering: developmental and acquired (also called neurogenic), which are distinguishable on clinical grounds.1 Developmental stuttering is more common and begins in childhood or adolescence. There are recent suggestions that stuttering could be the result of abnormal motor control.2,3⇓ We report a patient with developmental stuttering and partial epilepsy associated with celiac disease, who achieved a complete resolution of the stuttering disorder under treatment with levetiracetam.
A 34-year-old right-handed woman had medically intractable partial epilepsy and …
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