Article Text
Editor's choice
Editor's choice
Statistics from Altmetric.com
I don't like the fashion for theme issues of journals. In fact I hate them. Either the theme is of no interest to me (and I assume many other readers) and so I dump the issue in the bin, or it is right up my street in which case I get irritated that I have to spend a lot more time than anticipated with the issue of the journal in question. Surely journals are about having a bit of this and a bit of that to entice, entertain, instruct and generally amuse—particularly journals like Practical Neurology (or are we a magazine in which case we definitely should not be doing theme issues?). So why so much epilepsy, or at least possible epilepsy, in this issue—three articles indeed? …
Other content recommended for you
- When the first antiepileptic drug fails in a patient with juvenile myoclonic epilepsy
- Proceedings of the Association of British Neurologists, University of Oxford, 3 April – 5 April 2002
- Myoclonic epilepsy, parkinsonism, schizophrenia and left-handedness as common neuropsychiatric features in 22q11.2 deletion syndrome
- Managing childhood epilepsy
- Seizures and movement disorders: phenomenology, diagnostic challenges and therapeutic approaches
- Drug treatment of epilepsy in adults
- Treatment of difficult epilepsy
- Effects of sleep deprivation on cortical excitability in patients affected by juvenile myoclonic epilepsy: a combined transcranial magnetic stimulation and EEG study
- Clinical factors of drug resistance in juvenile myoclonic epilepsy
- Myoclonus: a pragmatic approach