Seizures might not be random but rather follow a cycle in the brain and a new research has found that cracking that pattern might help doctors to predict and treat epilepsy better. The findings suggest that researchers may soon be possible for clinicians to identify when patients are at highest risk for seizures allowing patients to plan around these brief but potentially dangerous events. Study's senior author Vikram Rao MD PhD an assistant professor of neurology at UCSF said One of the most disabling aspects of having epilepsy is the seeming randomness of seizures. If your neurologist can't tell you