Publications by authors named "ANDERMANN F"

Progressive myoclonus epilepsy (PME) may develop in adult life. We present two patients with PME appearing around the age of 30 years in whom the disorder represented a manifestation of Alzheimer's disease. This diagnosis must be considered in addition to possible Kufs' disease or myoclonic epilepsy with ragged red fibers (MERRF) when PME develops in young adults.

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Surgery is a safe and effective treatment for patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) who do not respond adequately to anticonvulsant medication and in whom the seizure generator can be identified and safely removed. Proton MR spectroscopic imaging (MRSI) can image and quantify neuronal damage in patients with TLE based on reduced signals from N-acetylaspartate (NAA), a compound localized exclusively in neurons. We performed proton MRSI in patients with TLE before and after surgical treatment to determine whether NAA or other resonance intensities changed in the temporal lobes of patients with TLE after surgery, and whether these changes correlated with surgical outcome.

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The combination of psychosis and refractory temporal lobe epilepsy is not rare. However, patients with chronic interictal psychosis and refractory epilepsy are rejected from many epilepsy surgery programmes purely on psychiatric grounds. It is often assumed that disturbed behaviour will prevent adequate preoperative evaluation or that the patients are unable to provide informed consent for preoperative investigations and for surgery.

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Surgery is a safe and effective treatment for drug-resistant temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE). However, bilateral electroencephalographic (EEG) abnormalities are frequently present, making presurgical lateralization difficult. New magnetic resonance (MR) techniques can help; proton magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging (MRSI) can detect and quantify focal neuronal damage or dysfunction based on reduced signals from the neuronal marker N-acetylaspartate, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-based measurements of amygdala-hippocampal volumes (MRIVol) can improve the detection of atrophy of these structures.

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To investigate possible distinct contributions of different temporal-lobe structures to odour identification, the University of Pennsylvania Smell Identification Test was administered monorhinally to seizure-free patients who had undergone one of three types of temporal-lobe resection practised in three different institutions for surgical treatment of epilepsy. The resections were neocorticectomy (Dublin), selective amygdalohippocampectomy (Zurich), or anterior temporal-lobe resection with encroachment on amygdala and hippocampus (Montreal). Resections, analysed from MRI scans, showed unexpected encroachment on medial structures in most patients of the neocorticectomy groups, and largest amygdala and hippocampal resections in the amygdalohippocampectomy groups.

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We sought to elucidate the contributions of the amygdala, hippocampus and temporal neocortex to learning and memory for verbal and visuospatial material. Two matched learning tasks, using abstract words versus abstract designs, were administered to patients with unilateral neocorticectomy (NCE; Dublin), selective amygdalohippocampectomy (AHE; Zurich) or anterior temporal-lobe resection invading the amygdala and hippocampus (ATL; Montreal). Data were analysed according to side and type of resection.

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A moderately retarded Japanese boy, with a normal male karyotype (46,XY), was diagnosed to have a subcortical band heterotopia or double cortex syndrome. The band heterotopia was relatively thick compared with that of other patients reported. On T2-weighted coronal MR sections, there were numerous radial linear structures between the cortex and the band, probably representing the trace of radial fibers.

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We studied genotype-phenotype correlations in a group of 100 patients with typical Friedreich ataxia (FRDA), and in three groups of patients with atypical clinical presentations, including 44 Acadian FRDA, 8 late-onset FRDA (LOFA), and 6 FRDA with retained reflexes (FARR). All patients, except 3 with typical FRDA, carried two copies of the FRDA-associated GAA triplet repeat expansion. Overall, the phenotypic spectrum of FRDA appeared to be wider than defined by the currently used diagnostic criteria.

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We describe 5 women and 5 men with periventricular nodular heterotopia and electroclinical features suggestive of temporal lobe epilepsy, who were surgically treated for control of medically refractory seizures. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed bilateral periventricular nodular heterotopia in 7 of the 10 patients. Because of the lack of clear localization, 6 patients were studied with intracranial depth electrode recordings.

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Progressive myoclonus epilepsy type 1 (EPM1, also known as Unverricht-Lundborg disease) is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by progressively worsening myoclonic jerks, frequent generalized tonic-clonic seizures, and a slowly progressive decline in cognition. Recently, two mutations in the cystatin B gene (also known as stefin B, STFB) mapping to 21q22.3 have been implicated in the EPM1 phenotype: a G-->C substitution in the last nucleotide of intron 1 that was predicted to cause a splicing defect in one family, and a C-->T substitution that would change an Arg codon (CGA) to a stop codon (TGA) at amino acid position 68, resulting in a truncated cystatin B protein in two other families.

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A number of variant forms of the neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses (NCL) have been described and remain unmapped. The genes for infantile (CLN1), juvenile (CLN3) and Finnish-variant late-infantile (CLN5) have previously been mapped to chromosome regions 1p32, 16p12 and 13q21.1-32 respectively.

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Modern neuroimaging can disclose epileptogenic lesions in many patients with partial epilepsy and, at times, display the coexistence of hippocampal atrophy in addition to an extrahippocampal lesion (dual pathology). We studied the postoperative seizure outcome of 64 patients with lesional epilepsy (median follow-up, 30 months) and considered separately the surgical results in the 51 patients with a single lesion and in the 13 who had dual pathology. In patients with a single lesion, 85% were seizure free or significantly improved (Engel's class I-II) when the lesion was totally removed compared with only 40% when there was incomplete resection (p < 0.

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Chronic encephalitis and epilepsy (Rasmussen's encephalitis) is a rare progressive disorder of uncertain etiology that usually occurs in children, producing focal epilepsy, hemiparesis, and intellectual deterioration. We identified 13 patients in whom seizures developed in adolescence or adulthood with a pathologic picture of chronic encephalitis. The clinical characteristics were more variable than those occurring in children, with the patients falling into three groups: five patients developed seizures in adulthood, but otherwise showed many resemblances to the childhood form; five developed seizures in adolescence, with similar presentation but rather more benign course than in the younger patients; and three presented with clinical features initially suggestive of a tumor.

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We performed proton magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging of the temporal lobes between, during, and soon after nonconvulsive seizures in 20 patients with documented temporal lobe epilepsy, 5 patients with primary generalized epilepsy, and 2 patients with secondary generalized epilepsy. Our objective was to determine whether there were metabolic changes observable by magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging during seizures and whether these changes were specific for focal or generalized nonconvulsive seizures. We found a significant increase in lactate to creatine plus phosphocreatine (lactate/creatine) values, reflecting an imbalance in energy supply and demand or an adaptation in response to ictal neuronal discharges, during and soon after complex partial seizures, but not during or soon after absence seizures associated with generalized epilepsy.

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We describe 9 patients with a bilateral malformation of cortical development, centered around the parasagittal and mesial aspects of the parietooccipital cortex, with magnetic resonance imaging findings suggestive of polymicrogyria. No familial distribution or etiologic factors were identified. Location in a watershed area between anterior and posterior cerebral arteries suggests postmigratory perfusion failure as the underlying cause.

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Despite the increasing number of patients affected by neuronal migration disorders (NMDs) recently diagnosed in vivo by means of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), few detailed data on the correlation between the neuroradiological and the anatomical features in the single NMD case are available. The present paper reports a combined cytoarchitectural and immunocytochemical analysis, by means of antisera recognizing specific neuronal and glial markers, of three MRI diagnosed NMD patients surgically treated for the relief of intractable seizures. The first case was a giant subcortical nodular heterotopia of morphologically normal neurons lacking any type of cortical lamination.

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Background: This study suggests an alternative surgical strategy for treating patients with intractable epilepsy in whom a lesion, visualized by imaging, is found to be at a distance from the maximal electroencephalographic abnormality (focus).

Methods: Sixty patients (divided into three groups of 20), all of whom have had surgical resection for intractable epilepsy, are reviewed. Group A patients, representing the most common situation of a congruent electroencephalographic focus and structural lesion, underwent resection of the lesion/focus.

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We studied 74 consecutive patients with temporal lobe epilepsy who were treated surgically and in whom the volumes of mesial temporal structures were determined preoperatively by magnetic resonance imaging. We divided the patients into three groups according to the volumetric findings: unilateral (63.5% of the patients), bilateral (23%), or no atrophy (13.

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We studied 31 consecutive patients with temporal and extratemporal epilepsy who underwent presurgical evaluation with stereotaxic depth EEG (SEEG) to assess the relationships between amygdalo-hippocampal (AM-HF) atrophy and the location of SEEG seizure onset and SEEG interictal abnormalities. Scalp EEG recordings with sphenoidal electrodes had shown bitemporal ictal or interictal epileptic abnormalities in all. Patients underwent high quality MRI scans, including MRI volumetric measurements of mesial temporal structures.

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Malformations of neuronal migration such as lissencephaly (agyria-pachygyria spectrum) are well-known causes of mental retardation and epilepsy that are often genetic. For example, isolated lissencephaly sequence and Miller-Dieker syndrome are caused by deletions involving a lissencephaly gene in chromosome 17p13.3, while many other malformation syndromes have autosomal recessive inheritance.

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