2,114 results match your criteria: "Comprehensive Epilepsy Center[Affiliation]"
Brain Dev
August 2023
Comprehensive Epilepsy Center, Seirei Hamamatsu General Hospital, Shizuoka, Japan.
Background: We hypothesized that fine finger motor functions are controlled by the ipsilesional hemisphere, and that gross motor functions are compensated for by the contralesional hemisphere after brain injury in humans. The purpose of this study was to compare finger movements before and after hemispherotomy that defunctionated the ipsilesional hemisphere for patients with hemispherical lesions.
Methods: We statistically compared Brunnstrom stage of the fingers, arm (upper extremity), and leg (lower extremity) before and after hemispherotomy.
Epilepsia
June 2023
Department. of Neurology, Comprehensive Epilepsy Center, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.
Crit Care Med
August 2023
Division of Epilepsy, Department of Neurology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.
Objectives: Status epilepticus (SE) is associated with significantly higher morbidity and mortality than isolated seizures. Our objective was to identify clinical diagnoses and rhythmic and periodic electroencephalogram patterns (RPPs) associated with SE and seizures.
Design: Retrospective cohort study.
Epilepsy Behav
May 2023
Clinical Neurology Research Center, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran. Electronic address:
Objective: The goal of the current study was to investigate the opinions of adult patients with epilepsy (PWE) with regard to the application of epilepsy surgery for their condition.
Methods: We surveyed all the consecutive adult PWE with at least one year history of epilepsy who were referred to our neurology clinics (Shiraz University of Medical Sciences) from September 2022 until January 2023. Using a questionnaire, the degree of acceptance of epilepsy surgery was measured depending on the chance of seizure freedom and risk for surgery complications.
Adv Ther
May 2023
Department of Neurology, University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville, FL, 32611, USA.
Cardiac arrest (CA) is a critical public health issue affecting more than half a million Americans annually. The main determinant of outcome post-CA is hypoxic-ischemic brain injury (HIBI), and temperature control is currently the only evidence-based, guideline-recommended intervention targeting secondary brain injury. Temperature control is a key component of a post-CA care bundle; however, conflicting evidence challenges its wide implementation across the vastly heterogeneous population of CA survivors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Neurophysiol Pract
February 2023
Comprehensive Epilepsy Center, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA.
Objective: Continuous EEG (cEEG) is the gold standard for detecting seizures and rhythmic and periodic patterns (RPPs) in critically ill patients but is often not available in health systems with limited resources. The current study aims to determine the feasibility and utility of low-cost, practical, limited montage, sub-dermal needle electrode EEG in a setting where otherwise no EEG would be available.
Methods: The study included all adult patients admitted to the intensive care unit of a single center over a 24-month period.
Neurol Clin Pract
April 2023
Department of Neurology (KSH, MCC, EKR, ELJ), Comprehensive Epilepsy Center, Department of Radiology and Radiological Science (LS), Division of Neuroimmunology and Neurological Infections (AV), and Division of Advanced Clinical Neurology (JP), Department of Neurology, and Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine (EKR), Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD.
Background And Objectives: Case reports and case series have described fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG)-PET findings in critically ill patients with rhythmic or periodic EEG patterns, with one reporting that metabolic activity increases with increasing lateralized periodic discharge (LPD) frequency. However, larger studies examining the relationship between FDG-PET hypermetabolism and rhythmic or periodic EEG patterns are lacking. The goal of this study was to investigate the association of FDG-PET hypermetabolism with electroencephalographic features in patients with neurologic disorders.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEpilepsia Open
June 2023
Epilepsy Research Center, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran.
Objective: We aimed to explore the underlying pathomechanisms of the comorbidity between three common systemic autoimmune disorders (SADs) [i.e., insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM), systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), and rheumatoid arthritis (RA)] and temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE), using bioinformatics tools.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlzheimers Dement
June 2023
Thai Red Cross Emerging Infectious Diseases Health Science Centre, World Health Organization Collaborating Centre for Research and Training on Viral Zoonoses, King Chulalongkorn Memorial Hospital The Thai Red Cross Society, Bangkok, Thailand.
Introduction: Despite the substantial accuracy of plasma p-tau in diagnosing Alzheimer's disease (AD) in research cohorts, data on real-life memory clinic patients are lacking.
Methods: Memory clinic patients at their early symptomatic stages were prospectively enrolled to undergo routine clinical assessment, plasma p-tau181 quantification (Simoa), amyloid and tau-positron emission tomography (PET). The diagnostic performance of plasma p-tau181, neurocognitive specialists, and regional tau-PET were compared head-to-head using amyloid-PET as the reference standard.
Neurology
May 2023
From the Grey Bruce Health Services (G.B.Y.), Owen Sound, Ontario, Canada; and Comprehensive Epilepsy Center KS 457 (F.W.D.), Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center Boston, MA.
Epilepsia
June 2023
Comprehensive Epilepsy Center, Division of Neurology, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA.
Epilepsy Behav
April 2023
Division of Neurology, Department of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand; Chulalongkorn Comprehensive Epilepsy Center of Excellence (CCEC), King Chulalongkorn Memorial Hospital, The Thai Red Cross Society, Bangkok, Thailand. Electronic address:
Objective: Self-management is an important strategy for helping people with epilepsy (PWE) control their seizures and improve their quality of life. To date, there are scarce standard measurement tools for assessing self-management practices. This study aimed to develop and validate a Thai version of the Epilepsy Self-Management Scale (Thai-ESMS) for Thai people with epilepsy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Neurol
July 2023
Comprehensive Epilepsy Center, Department of Neurology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, United States.
Epilepsia
May 2023
Comprehensive Epilepsy Center, New York University Langone Medical Center, New York, New York, USA.
Selection criteria for clinical trials for medication-resistant epilepsy are used to limit variability and to ensure safety. However, it has become more challenging to recruit subjects for trials. This study investigated the impact of each inclusion and exclusion criterion on medication-resistant epilepsy clinical trial recruitment at a large academic epilepsy center.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFmedRxiv
September 2024
Epilepsy Research Centre, University of Melbourne, Austin Health, Heidelberg 3084, Australia.
Identifying genetic risk factors for highly heterogeneous disorders like epilepsy remains challenging. Here, we present the largest whole-exome sequencing study of epilepsy to date, with >54,000 human exomes, comprising 20,979 deeply phenotyped patients from multiple genetic ancestry groups with diverse epilepsy subtypes and 33,444 controls, to investigate rare variants that confer disease risk. These analyses implicate seven individual genes, three gene sets, and four copy number variants at exome-wide significance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Neuropathol Commun
March 2023
Department of Human Genetics, Yokohama City University Graduate School of Medicine, 3-9 Fukuura, Kanazawa-Ku, Yokohama, 236-0004, Japan.
Focal cortical dysplasia is the most common malformation during cortical development, sometimes excised by epilepsy surgery and often caused by somatic variants of the mTOR pathway genes. In this study, we performed a genetic analysis of epileptogenic brain malformed lesions from 64 patients with focal cortical dysplasia, hemimegalencephy, brain tumors, or hippocampal sclerosis. Targeted sequencing, whole-exome sequencing, and single nucleotide polymorphism microarray detected four germline and 35 somatic variants, comprising three copy number variants and 36 single nucleotide variants and indels in 37 patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEpilepsy Behav
April 2023
Comprehensive Epilepsy Center, Department of Neurology, Yale University, New Haven, CT, United States.
Status epilepticus is a potentially life-threatening medical emergency associated with poor functional outcomes. Improving our ability to accurately predict functional outcomes is beneficial to optimizing treatment strategies. Currently, there are four published status epilepticus scores in adults: STESS (Status Epilepticus Severity Score), EMSE (Epidemiology-Based Mortality Score in Status Epilepticus), END-IT (Encephalitis-Nonconvulsive-Diazepam resistance-Imaging-Tracheal intubation), and recently published ACD (Age-level of Consciousness-Duration of status epilepticus) score.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur Neurol
July 2023
Epilepsy Research Center, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran.
Epilepsia Open
June 2023
Department of Pharmacology & Toxicology, School of Pharmacy, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran.
Objective: We investigated the associations between FKBP5 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and functional seizures (FS).
Methods: Seventy patients with FS, 140 with major depressive disorder (MDD), and 140 healthy controls were studied. Their DNAs were analyzed for the rs1360780 in the 3' region and rs9470080 in the 5' region of the FKBP5.
Yonago Acta Med
February 2023
Comprehensive Epilepsy Center, Seirei Hamamatsu General Hospital, Hamamatsu 430-8558, Japan.
Background: Childhood epilepsy with centrotemporal spikes (CECTS) is the most common epilepsy syndrome in school-aged children. However, predictors for seizure frequency are yet to be clarified using the phase lag index (PLI) analyses. We investigated PLI of scalp electroencephalography data at onset to identify potential predictive markers for seizure times.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEpilepsia
April 2023
Comprehensive Epilepsy Center, New York University Grossman School of Medicine, New York, New York, USA.
Objective: High-fat and low-carbohydrate diets can reduce seizure frequency in some treatment-resistant epilepsy patients, including the more flexible modified Atkins diet (MAD), which is more palatable, mimicking fasting and inducing high ketone body levels. Low-carbohydrate diets may shift brain energy production, particularly impacting neuron- and astrocyte-linked metabolism.
Methods: We evaluated the effect of short-term MAD on molecular mechanisms in adult epilepsy patients from surgical brain tissue and plasma compared to control participants consuming a nonmodified higher carbohydrate diet (n = 6 MAD, mean age = 43.
Curr Opin Neurol
April 2023
Westmead Comprehensive Epilepsy Unit, Westmead Hospital, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
Purpose Of Review: The major advances in critical care EEG have been the development of rapid response EEG, major revision of the American Clinical Neurophysiology Society's (ACNS) standardized critical care EEG terminology, and the commencement of treatment trials on rhythmic and periodic patterns (RPPs) that do not qualify as seizures.
Recent Findings: Rapid response EEG (rEEG) has proven an important supplement to full montage continuous EEG monitoring (cEEG). This EEG can be applied in a few minutes and provides excellent ability to exclude seizures, selecting those where conversion to cEEG would have the greatest diagnostic yield.
J Clin Neurophysiol
February 2023
Department of Neurosurgery and Epilepsy, University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands.
Myoclonus is a motor symptom commonly associated with reflex seizures in people with idiopathic generalized epilepsies. The most frequently observed triggers of myoclonus are related to visual stimuli, including flashing lights or patterns; nonetheless, myoclonus can also be activated by movement, speech or reading, calculations, and praxis. Reflex myoclonic seizures may be the hallmark of a reflex epilepsy, but it may lead to the diagnosis of generalized epilepsy syndromes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArXiv
February 2023
Department of Ecology and Evolution, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, USA.
Globally, we are witnessing the rise of complex, non-communicable diseases (NCDs) related to changes in our daily environments. Obesity, asthma, cardiovascular disease, and type 2 diabetes are part of a long list of "lifestyle" diseases that were rare throughout human history but are now common. A key idea from anthropology and evolutionary biology-the evolutionary mismatch hypothesis-seeks to explain this phenomenon.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Alzheimers Dis
March 2023
Memory and Aging Center, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Cortical network hyperexcitability related to synaptic dysfunction in Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a potential target for therapeutic intervention. In recent years, there has been increased interest in the prevalence of silent seizures and interictal epileptiform discharges (IEDs, or seizure tendency), with both entities collectively termed "subclinical epileptiform activity" (SEA), on neurophysiologic studies in AD patients. SEA has been demonstrated to be common in AD, with prevalence estimates ranging between 22-54%.
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