Publications by authors named "Roberto Santalucia"

This study investigates the dose-dependent EEG effects of Vagus Nerve Stimulation (VNS) in patients with drug-resistant epilepsy. This research examines how varying VNS intensities impacts EEG power spectrum and synchronization in a cohort of 28 patients. Patients were categorized into responders, partial-responders, and non-responders based on seizure frequency reduction.

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. In 1/3 of patients, anti-seizure medications may be insufficient, and resective surgery may be offered whenever the seizure onset is localized and situated in a non-eloquent brain region. When surgery is not feasible or fails, vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) therapy can be used as an add-on treatment to reduce seizure frequency and/or severity.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the effectiveness of fully automated electrical source imaging (ESI) in improving clinical decision-making for patients with MRI-negative epilepsy.
  • ESI analysis was conducted on patients at St-Luc University Hospital, with results compared to traditional presurgical assessments and stereo-electroencephalography (SEEG).
  • It found that ESI changed management plans for 41% of patients, with a significant portion confirming the ESI's localization through follow-up invasive recordings.
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Recessive mutations in the SLC13A5 gene encoding the sodium-dependent citrate transporter are a recently identified cause of developmental and epileptic encephalopathy. Here, we describe a child harboring a novel homozygous loss-of-function mutation in the SLC13A5 gene (c.1496C>T-p.

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Ictal vomiting is a rare condition easily misdiagnosed as a common disease. We report two children presenting with retching and vomiting as the main ictal manifestation. Patient 1 was a four-year-old girl with a history of daily nocturnal vomiting for two months, first interpreted as a functional disorder, then as a viral infection.

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Purpose: To determine whether awake EEG criteria can differentiate epileptic encephalopathy with continuous spike and waves during sleep (EE-CSWS) at the time of cognitive regression from typical, self-limited focal epilepsy (SFE).

Methods: This retrospective case-control study was based on the analysis of awake EEGs and included 15 patients with EE-CSWS and 15 age-matched and sex-matched patients with typical SFE. The EEGs were anonymised and scored by four independent readers.

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