Publications by authors named "Jeremy T Moreau"

The development of Territorial Food Strategies, like the French “Projets Alimentaires Territoriaux”, implies proposing new tools to support local decision-making. The FRUGAL set of indicators has been specifically developed for this purpose: to provide an expertise capacity to local actors and a knowledge base to understand their local food system and to develop and revise their food strategy. In this paper, we present the theoretical elements that made it possible to design and structure this set of indicators; the method for developing these indicators; and how this tool can be used by urban participants wishing to use it for a local diagnosis.

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The popular brain monitoring method of electroencephalography (EEG) has seen a surge in commercial attention in recent years, focusing mostly on hardware miniaturization. This has led to a varied landscape of portable EEG devices with wireless capability, allowing them to be used by relatively unconstrained users in real-life conditions outside of the laboratory. The wide availability and relative affordability of these devices provide a low entry threshold for newcomers to the field of EEG research.

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Objective: We aimed to clarify the pathophysiology of epilepsy involving seizures with apparently generalized onset, progressing to focal ictal rhythm through stereotactic EEG (SEEG) implantation, recording, stimulation and high-frequency oscillation (HFO) analysis.

Methods: We identified two patients with seizures with bilateral electrographic onset evolving to focal ictal rhythm, who underwent SEEG implantation. Patients had pre-surgical epilepsy work-up, including prolonged video scalp EEG, brain MRI, PET, ictal/interictal SPECT, MEG, and EEG-fMRI prior to SEEG implantation.

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Background: Continuous spike wave in sleep (CSWS) is an electroencephalogram (EEG) pattern associated with developmental and epileptic encephalopathy with spike-and-wave activation in sleep (DEE-SWAS). This etiologically heterogeneous syndrome may occur because of genetic factors and congenital or acquired brain lesions. We studied the pattern of clinical presentation and underlying etiologies in patients with DEE-SWAS that respond to resective surgery.

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Article Synopsis
  • Researchers aimed to enhance postsurgical seizure outcomes for children with poorly defined cases of focal epilepsy by implementing a new, multi-step evaluation protocol that included collaboration with nearby hospitals.
  • They compared the outcomes of 22 children who underwent surgery under this new strategy to 22 children who had previous treatment using standard methods and required at least one year of follow-up.
  • Results showed that a higher percentage of patients in the new protocol group were seizure-free after one year, with specific imaging techniques like magnetoencephalography and PET/MRI contributing positively to these outcomes.
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Successful surgical treatment of patients with focal drug-resistant epilepsy remains challenging, especially in cases for which it is difficult to define the area of cortex from which seizures originate, the seizure onset zone (SOZ). Various diagnostic methods are needed to select surgical candidates and determine the extent of resection. Interictal magnetoencephalography (MEG) with source imaging has proven to be useful for presurgical evaluation, but the use of ictal MEG data remains limited.

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Subtraction ictal single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) coregistered to MRI (SISCOM) is a well-established technique for quantitative analysis of ictal vs interictal SPECT images that can contribute to the identification of the seizure onset zone in patients with drug-resistant epilepsy. However, there is presently a lack of user-friendly free and open-source software to compute SISCOM results from raw SPECT and MRI images. We aimed to develop a simple graphical desktop application for computing SISCOM.

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We illustrate a case of post-traumatic recurrent transient prosopagnosia in a paediatric patient with a right posterior inferior temporal gyrus haemorrhage seen on imaging and interictal electroencephalogram abnormalities in the right posterior quadrant. Face recognition area mapping with magnetoencephalography (MEG) and functional MRI (fMRI) was performed to clarify the relationship between the lesion and his prosopagnosia, which showed activation of the right fusiform gyrus that colocalised with the lesion. Lesions adjacent to the right fusiform gyrus can result in seizures presenting as transient prosopagnosia.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study evaluated the effectiveness of arterial spin labeling (ASL) perfusion 3T-MRI in assessing poorly defined focal epilepsy in children prior to surgery.
  • Out of 25 pediatric patients, ASL abnormalities were observed in 68% of cases, with higher detection rates in MRI-positive individuals compared to MRI-negative ones.
  • The ASL results showed a high sensitivity (91%) but lower specificity (50%) when matched against the confirmed epileptogenic zone in surgically treated patients, indicating its potential utility in presurgical evaluations for epilepsy.
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The purpose of this study was to investigate the influence of 3-T intraoperative MRI (ioMRI) on the extent of resection of pediatric focal epileptogenic lesions, residual lesion volumes, and postoperative seizure outcomes. All surgical procedures for focal epilepsy from 2003 to 2017 were retrospectively reviewed. Patients were divided into two groups: those who underwent ioMRI and those who did not.

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Meningiomas are known to have relatively lower aggressiveness and better outcomes than other central nervous system (CNS) tumors. However, there is considerable overlap between clinical and radiological features characterizing benign, atypical, and malignant tumors. In this study, we developed methods and a practical app designed to assist with the diagnosis and prognosis of meningiomas.

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We present a significant extension of the Brain Imaging Data Structure (BIDS) to support the specific aspects of magnetoencephalography (MEG) data. MEG measures brain activity with millisecond temporal resolution and unique source imaging capabilities. So far, BIDS was a solution to organise magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data.

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Neuroimaging has been facing a data deluge characterized by the exponential growth of both raw and processed data. As a result, mining the massive quantities of digital data collected in these studies offers unprecedented opportunities and has become paramount for today's research. As the neuroimaging community enters the world of "Big Data", there has been a concerted push for enhanced sharing initiatives, whether within a multisite study, across studies, or federated and shared publicly.

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In contrast with other imaging modalities, there is presently a scarcity of fully open resources in magnetoencephalography (MEG) available to the neuroimaging community. Here we present a collaborative effort led by the McConnell Brain Imaging Centre of the Montreal Neurological Institute, and the Université de Montréal to build and share a centralised repository to curate MEG data in raw and processed form for open dissemination. The Open MEG Archive (OMEGA, omega.

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