Ankit Pandey
Even while the effect of epilepsy on expressive language has been extensively explored, examined, and supported by science, there isn't much evidence to support the contrary conclusion. What is the link between language use associated with disorders and epileptic seizures? What potential diagnostic conundrums can professionals in the professions of neurology, speech-language pathology, and allied fields encounter? How far along is research into psychogenic nonepileptic seizures, which can be difficult for doctors to correctly diagnose and hurt patients' health? To answer these questions, the current study examines the pathophysiological and psychogenic roots of stuttering, a prevalent and continuously intensifying (because of the COVID-19 pandemic) speech disorder. To highlight the difficulty and significance of accurately diagnosing stuttering-induced epilepsy, a particular subtype of languageinduced epilepsy, it also examines the function of stuttering as a contributing factor to the emergence of epileptic seizures.