3 results match your criteria: "Miami Children's Hospital Brain Institute[Affiliation]"
Mol Neurobiol
December 2015
Department of Environmental and Occupational Health, Florida International University, 11200 SW 8th Street, Miami, FL, 33199, USA.
The molecular mechanism unraveling why a particular type of pediatric brain tumor (pBT) behaves so differently from child to child or genetic/epigenetic changes in the mitochondrial genome vary from tumor to tumor is not clearly understood. Despite the identification of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutations in different types of pBT, the contribution of mitochondrial dysfunction-related genes or proteins that are selectively up- or down-regulated in pBT of different types has not been comprehensively examined. In the present study, we combined a 2D DIGE approach with protein identification using MALDI-TOF MS and LC-MS/MS, coupled with mtDNA genomics to screen brain samples for discovering changes in protein expression, and mtDNA sequence variation and mtDNA copy number in the disease states.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Neurophysiol
December 2005
Department of Neurology, Miami Children's Hospital Brain Institute, 3100 SW 62nd Avenue, FL 33155, Florida, U.S.A.
Near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) monitors changes in the regional cerebral oxygenation (rSO) and has been used to study cerebral physiologic functions in normal states and during epileptic seizures. Yet, the limitations and pitfalls of the technique are not fully understood. The authors evaluated NIRS changes over the frontal lobes during language tasks known to be associated with the integrity of the dominant frontal lobe in 17 normal adults (handedness: 14 right, 3 left).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Neurophysiol
April 2005
Department of Neurology, Miami Children's Hospital Brain Institute, Miami, Florida 33155, USA.
The authors compared interictal and ictal abnormalities from chronic intracranial recordings in children with Taylor-type cortical dysplasia (TTCD) and nondysplastic lesions. Interictal epileptiform discharges and ictal patterns were retrospectively analyzed in 13 children with TTCD and 12 children with nondysplastic lesions (tumor, 4; gliosis, 8). Features analyzed and compared between groups included the morphologic and temporal characteristics and field distribution of ictal and interictal patterns and rapidity of ictal propagation.
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