19 results match your criteria: "University of Alabama at Birmingham 35294-0021[Affiliation]"

Inclusion or full participation by children with disabilities in programs and activities designed for typically developing children benefits children with and without disabilities and their families. Inclusive care programs are least available for school-age children and adolescents. A review of the literature identified best practices for effective inclusive out-of-school care, including: a written program philosophy; a written plan for inclusive programs; strong leadership; a disability awareness program for staff and children; training and support for staff; sufficient staff to meet program needs; a working communication and collaboration; an adapted setting, activities, and time parameters; proficient collaboration with families; and an evaluation plan.

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The nociferous cortex hypothesis predicts that electrophysiological normalization to distal extratemporal brain regions following anterior temporal lobectomy (ATL) will result in improvements in executive functioning. The present study examined the effects of seizure laterality and seizure control on executive function change. The authors administered the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST), Trails B, and the Controlled Oral Word Association Test to 174 temporal lobe epilepsy patients who underwent ATL.

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Objective: To study the acute and steady-state cognitive effects of three new antiepileptic drugs (AEDs): gabapentin, lamotrigine, and topiramate.

Background: Several newer antiepileptic medications approved recently by the Food and Drug Administration are gaining attention as efficacious alternatives to established AEDs. Greater tolerability with fewer side effects are reported in some.

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Intracellular recordings were obtained from neocortical brain slices of adult rats maintained in vitro. The effect of metabotropic glutamate receptor activation on spike frequency adaptation in regular spiking layer II and III neurons was determined. Putative metabotropic glutamate receptor agonists and antagonists, as well as inhibitors of intracellular signaling systems, were tested.

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Glial cells are nervous-system cells that have classically been considered to be inexcitable. Despite their lack of electrical excitability, they can express voltage-activated Na+ channels with properties similar to the Na+ channels used by excitable cells to generate action potentials. The functional role that these voltage-activated Na+ channels play in glia is unclear.

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We studied 10 medically intractable temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) patients prior to surgery using proton magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging (MRSI) to localize seizure foci. We found significantly elevated creatine/N-acetylaspartate (Cr/NAA) unilaterally in 8 and bilaterally in 2 patients. Five patients have been studied again 1 year after surgery.

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1. Inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (IPSPs) evoked by stimulation at the white-matter/layer VI border were recorded intracellularly from visual cortical layer IV neurons maintained in vitro. These IPSPs, typically not apparent at resting membrane potentials, were measured at membrane potentials 15-25 mV depolarized from resting levels.

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The present study examined the ability of analog malingerers to feign postconcussion symptoms and neuropsychological performance patterns seen in mild head-injured patients. Experimental subjects were randomly assigned to either a control condition, asked to feign deficits consistent with mild head injury without task specific instruction, or feign deficits while given task-specific instruction. A separate group of mild head-injured patients served as a clinical comparison group.

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Brief epochs of pairing of low frequency synaptic activation and postsynaptic depolarization, in vitro, in supragranular neurons of nature guinea-pig visual cortex lead to a transient (20-60 min) synaptic potentiation. The process is due to a true up-regulation of excitatory synapse efficiency onto the activated neuron. The potentiation requires NMDA receptor activation and a postsynaptic calcium signal for induction and it is modifiable by endogenous nitric oxide (NO) production in the mature cortex.

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Neuroimaging in pediatric epilepsy.

Epilepsia

July 1996

UAB Epilepsy Center, Department of Neurology, University of Alabama at Birmingham 35294-0021, USA.

Neuroimaging techniques have advanced the diagnosis, management, and understanding of the pathophysiology underlying the epilepsies. High-resolution ultrasound is an important and useful technique in the investigation of prematures and neonates with seizures. Computed tomography (CT) scans have a diminishing role in the investigation of patients with epilepsy, but in the absence of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), CT may detect gross structural pathology.

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Excitotoxic cell death is hypothesized to contribute to numerous neuropathologic conditions, including hypoxic/ischemic encephalopathy, hypoglycemia, Parkinson's disease, and Huntington's disease. Neuronal death from excitotoxic lesions has been shown to be an active process, with activation of immediate early gene transcription, resulting in secondary changes in gene expression. Another feature of neurotoxic cell death that has been examined is the presence of DNA fragmentation, which presumably indicates impending nuclear disintegration.

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The Infant Health and Development Program was an eight-site randomized controlled trial of comprehensive early intervention for low birthweight, premature infants during the first 3 years of life in which intellectual development was an outcome of major importance. At 24 and 36 months, but not at 12 months, higher Mental Development Index and IQ were associated with higher levels of participation in the intervention. In a longitudinal analysis of these data, we found that the intellectual development of children in the intervention group was associated with each of the three intervention modalities (the number of home visits received, days attended at child centers, and the number of parent meetings attended) but not with children's background characteristics (i.

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Cerebral developmental malformations are increasingly recognized as a major cause of developmental delay and epilepsy. The incidence of these developmental malformations in patients with epilepsy is not known, but epilepsy surgery data suggest that this pathology is commonly seen in children who undergo epilepsy surgery for intractable epilepsy. These malformations can be diagnosed by a combination of clinical, neurophysiological, and imaging techniques.

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Intra-axonal recordings of stomatogastric nerve axon 1 (SNAX1) indicate that there are synaptic inputs onto the SNAX1 terminals in the stomatogastric ganglion (STG) of the crab Cancer borealis (Nusbaum et al., 1992b). To determine whether this synaptic input only influenced SNAX1 activity within the STG, we identified the SNAX1 soma in the commissural ganglion (CoG).

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The pentapeptide proctolin (Proct.; Arg-Tyr-Leu-Pro-Thr) is a modulatory transmitter found throughout the crustacean nervous system. No information is available in this system, however, as to how the actions of this peptide are terminated.

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1. It has been suggested from mathematical models and in vivo experiments in the visual cortex that periods of temporal covariance of pre- and postsynaptic activity can lead to a potentiation or depression of synaptic efficacy. We directly tested this hypothesis in vitro in the guinea pig and cat visual cortex.

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L-Glutamate and norepinephrine are examples of a major excitatory neurotransmitter and a neuromodulator in the cerebral cortex, respectively. Little is known of how chemical signaling between the anatomically distinct chemical pathways occurs. Specific activation of the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) class of glutamate receptor in synaptosomal preparations from guinea pig cerebral cortex caused release of both of these chemicals, and this release was blocked by agents that inhibit nitric oxide (NO) production or remove NO from the extracellular space.

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Developmental disorders of the neocortex are commonly associated with epilepsy. The development of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has advanced our understanding of these disorders by permitting accurate recognition and clinical correlation during life. These disorders have multiple etiologies and are dependent on the time of injury to the developing nervous system.

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