Epilepsy research
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Convulsive motor activity is a clinical manifestation of secondarily generalized seizures evolving from different focal regions. The way in which the motor seizures present themselves is not very different from most of the generalized seizures in and between epilepsy patients. This might point towards the involvement of motor-related cortices and corticospinal pathway for wide spread propagation of epileptic activity. Our aim was to identify changes in the cerebral structures and to correlate clinical variables with structural changes particularly in the motor-related cortices and pathway of patients with generalized convulsions from different seizure foci. ⋯ The increment of GM volume and WM FA in the motor pathway positively correlated with severity and duration of epilepsy. The demonstrated microstructural changes of motor pathways imply a plastic process of motor networks in the patients with frequent generalization of focal seizures.
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Periventricular nodular heterotopia (PNH) is an important cause of chronic epilepsy. The purpose of this study was to evaluate region-specific connectivity in PNH patients with epilepsy and assess correlation between connectivity strength and clinical factors including duration and prognosis. ⋯ Nodules in PNH were structurally and functionally connected to the cortex. The extent is stronger in patients with longstanding or intractable epilepsy. These findings suggest the region-specific interactions may help better evaluate prognosis and seek medical or surgical interventions of PNH-related epilepsy.
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Patients with drug refractory epilepsy (DRE) and a high level of education may differ in their language recovery after surgery. Our aim was to determine whether there were differences in the extent of improvement and pattern of reorganization of language functions on functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) after surgery to treat refractory temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) between patients with more than 12 years of formal education versus those with a shorter period of regular schooling. ⋯ Greater improvement in language skills and BOLD activation in the left hemisphere in TLE-patients (after epilepsy surgery) with a high level of education was similar to that of healthy controls, implying that education has an effect on the functional reorganization/recovery of language areas.
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Review Meta Analysis
Association between the HLA-B alleles and carbamazepine-induced SJS/TEN: A meta-analysis.
From our current understanding, the association between the human leukocyte antigen (HLA), HLA-B*1502, and carbamazepine(CBZ)-induced Stevens-Jonson syndrome and toxic epidermal necrolysis (SJS/TEN) in the Asian population is quite clear. However the relationship between other HLA-B alleles and CBZ-induced severe cutaneous adverse drug reactions (SCADRs) remains unclear. We aimed to identify other non-HLA-B*1502 alleles in patients with CBZ-induced SCADRs through a meta-analysis. ⋯ Our study demonstrated that in the Asian population, HLA-B*4001, HLA-B*4601, HLA-B*5801 were strong protective factors in the development of CBZ-induced SJS/TEN whereas HLA-B*1511 was a risk factor. While more studies may be needed in order to confirm these findings, consideration should be taken into testing Asian patients for at-risk alleles prior to CBZ therapy initiation.
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Thalamo-cortical networks have mainly been studied in the generation of idiopathic (genetic) epilepsies. The purpose of this study was to analyze EEG patterns and the occurrence of focal (symptomatic) epileptic seizures in patients with acquired circumscribed thalamic lesions. ⋯ Pathological EEG findings are common in patients with acute and chronic thalamic lesions. EEG patterns associated with circumscribed thalamic lesions were influenced by the affected thalamic subregion. As in idiopathic generalized epilepsy, also in symptomatic epilepsy, the medial thalamus revealed to play a role in the generation of epileptiform discharges. In the patients with generalized periodic discharges and acute lesions in the ventral-anterior-medial thalamus, however, EEG changes were more likely caused by a disinhibition of cortico-thalamic networks than by a status epilepticus and thus risks and benefits of an aggressive antiepileptic treatment must be thoroughly balanced.