251 results on '"Péter, Halász"'
Search Results
52. A Review on the Pathomechanism of Interictal Psychiatry Comorbidities in Epilepsy
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Péter Halász, Dániel Fabó, Andrea Kovacs, András Horváth, Geza Szabo, and Anna Szűcs
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Psychosis ,business.industry ,Cognition ,Grey matter ,medicine.disease ,Epilepsy ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Medicine ,Ictal ,business ,Psychiatry ,Psychosocial ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Default mode network - Abstract
Epilepsies, especially mesiotemporal epilepsy in adulthood, are frequently associated with chronic cognitive loss, psychiatry symptoms and conditions. We aim to present the pathophysiology of interictal psychiatric comorbidities interlocked with cognitive loss; severely compromising the quality of life of epilepsy patients. We will present the mechanism of cognitive harm related to interictal spiking; and the abnormalities of brain networks in epilepsy, especially of the default mode network, briefly looking into psychosocial and pharmacology effects, too. In addition to seizures, interictal epileptic activity, mainly in sleep, may exert chronic cognitive harm, increasing the risk for primarily non-cognitive psychotic conditions as well. Interictal spikes and pathological high frequency oscillations curiously resemble normal memory traces; enabling them to “behave” and be mistaken for engrams by the memory process. Epileptic activity impairs the white and grey matter of the brain; likely contributing to brain network changes. The epileptic network changes resemble those seen in non-epileptic psychiatry conditions, offering a network-interpretation of psychiatric comorbidity.
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- 2018
53. Epileptic Encephalopathies
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Péter Halász and Anna Szűcs
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- 2018
54. Juvenile Idiopathic Myoclonic Epilepsy (Janz Syndrome) as a System Epilepsy Affecting the Corticothalamic System and the Frontal Motor and Cognitive Frontal Subsystems
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Péter Halász and Anna Szűcs
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Valproic Acid ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Seizure types ,business.industry ,Audiology ,Electroencephalography ,medicine.disease ,Idiopathic generalized epilepsy ,Epilepsy ,Neuroimaging ,Reflex Epilepsy ,Reflex ,medicine ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Juvenile idiopathic myoclonic epilepsy (JME) starts in adolescence and young adulthood. Antiepileptic drugs, especially valproic acid, result in permanent freedom from seizures; however, reducing and stopping medication may lead to the recurrence of seizures. The typical seizure types are myocloni with no disturbance of consciousness, generalized tonic–clonic, and absence seizures. Reflex seizures—induced by a consistent triggering stimulus—occur in 50% of patients, and a reflex mechanism probably underlies many “spontaneous” seizures. There are four types of reflex epileptic features: (1) genetic photosensitivity ( Wolf and Goosses, 1986 ) in the form of “photoparoxysmal response,” affecting up to 90% of JME patients (Appleton et al., 2000); (2) sensitivity to eye closure ( fixation off activity ), 15%–20% of patients; (3) orofacial reflex myocloni , presenting as rapid small jerks in the perioral muscles, activated by language-related activities; and (4) praxis - related reflex epilepsy (Matsuoka et al., 2000; Yacubian et al., 2014). Similar to absence epilepsy, a dysfunction of the corticothalamic system underlies JME, but clinical and neuroimaging data suggest the participation of motor and cognitive networks in JME. In the section “Reading Epilepsy,” we include a related (spectrum) condition, featured by orofacial reflex myocloni (Yacubian et al., 2015), affecting 25%–30% of JME patients (Salek-Haddadi et al., 2009). The genetically determined hyperexcitability of the speech network underlies reading epilepsy; reading or any verbal activity may trigger a seizure. Idiopathic generalized epilepsy is not a tenable construction any more, and the multilevel incongruence regarding the EEG, seizure semiology, and genotypic features of JME obstructs its clear classification.
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- 2018
55. Reggeli ebéd, déli ebéd...
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Péter, Halász
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- 2022
56. Sleep, Epilepsies, and Cognitive Impairment
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Peter Halasz, Anna Szucs, Peter Halasz, and Anna Szucs
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- Mild cognitive impairment, Sleep, Cognition disorders, Epilepsy, Sleep disorders
- Abstract
Translational research connects science and clinical medicine from'the bench to the bedside.'In Sleep, Epilepsies and Cognitive Impairment, the authors look back from the bedside to the brain function underlying clinical symptoms and reveal mechanisms explored by contemporary neuroimaging and signal analysis in the overlapping fields of sleep and epilepsy. This book will help the reader to see epilepsy from a new viewpoint. The common pathophysiology binding together the diverse manifestations of epilepsies is the exaggeration of plastic functions of the brain involving the hippocampus, the non-specific thalamocortical system and the perisylvian cognitive network. Epileptic derailment seems to be the price for the latest achievements of the mammal and human brain; namely the highly developed ability to change and learn. The contemporary results of sleep research provide new viewpoints to explain why sleep and epilepsy are bedfellows. Converging evidence supports the concept that one of the most important biological roles of NREM sleep is the renewal of synaptic balance ensuring learning ability from one day to the next and consolidation of new memories. Epilepsy and NREM sleep use overlapping structures and functions, therefore epilepsy beginning in early childhood may interfere with sleep plastic functions. NREM sleep, which affects original learning and memory, may become the hidden source of chronic cognitive impairment when epilepsy occurs during sleep and blocks the plastic processes. Sleep, Epilepsies and Cognitive Impairment abandons the academic classification of epilepsy by following the system epilepsy concept, binding major epilepsies with structures and functions of physiological brain systems. It tries to show within this system the close interrelationship between sleep, epilepsy and cognition. Neuroscientists, clinical epileptologists and neurologists interested in brain processes underlying brain plasticity, sleep and epilepsy will find this book thought provoking. It offers good'brain-gymnastics'for reconsidering the ideas on epilepsy. - It provides contemporary knowledge about the neurophysiological and functional anatomical background of major epilepsies - Treats major epilepsies as system epilepsies of brain networks - Reveals the interrelationship of sleep, epilepsy and cognitive impairment showing how epileptic manifestations became facilitated in NREM sleep and interferes with sleep plastic functions
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- 2018
57. Epileptic seizure propagation from the second somatic sensory area to the fronto-medial region, by insular redistribution. A case report and a connectome description
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Loránd Erőss, Péter Halász, Attila Balogh, and Dániel Fabó
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remote frontal lobe seizures ,insular node-epileptic network ,connectome ,Pharmacology toxicology ,medicine.disease ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,lcsh:RC346-429 ,second somatic sensory area ,Epilepsy ,nervous system ,Connectome ,medicine ,Second Somatic Sensory Area ,Epileptic seizure ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,lcsh:Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,psychological phenomena and processes - Abstract
SUMMARY Introduction. The seizure propagation phenomenon by inducing remote symptoms brings several difficulties in finding the seizure onset and delineating the epileptic network which should be taken into consideration in epilepsy surgery. By demonstrating a difficult (MRI negative) epilepsy surgery case explored with invasive presurgical evaluation we highlight the importance to recognise the secondary sensory area and to explore the the parieto-opercular-insular-medial frontal network in certain cases. A further conclusion is the consideration of the redistributory role of the insula as a special structure in the cerebral connectome, having a role in epileptic network organisation. Aims. To support the role of the insula in the organisation of an opercular – medial frontal epileptic network and to confirm Penfield’s the “second somatic sensory leg area” by way of a case report. We try to give an up to date exploration of our patient’s remote epileptic seizures by way of a connectome. Methods. The epileptic disorder was studied with intensive video EEG monitoring and two times 3T MRI. Interictal FDG (fluorodeoxyglucose) PET was also undertaken. Beside the scalp EEG and computerized frequency analysis, the evaluation was performed by invasive EEG with 2 grids and 2 strips and an insular deep electrode in addition. Electrical cortical stimulation and cortical mapping were also undertaken. Results. The video-EEG study revealed the complex seizure semiology. The left sided global somatosesensory aura in the leg, followed supplementary motor area manifestations represented a remote seizure. The seizure onset zone and the symptomatogenic zone were localised by the invasive electrophysiology. With the insular deep electrode we succeeded to explore the propagation of ictal activity to the insula and later to frontal medial surface. The PET, the negative 3T MRI results and the postprocessing morphometry confirmed the lesional origin and localised the epileptogenic area to the second somato-sensory field where a dysgenesis was located. Conclusions. By preoperative invasive video-EEG evaluation, the second somato-sensory leg area was delineated as the seizure onset zone. The resection of this area by IIb type cortical dysgenesis, resulted in a complete relief of the seizures. The invasive video-EEG revealed the peculiar role of the insula in the propagation of the epileptic seizure from the second sensory leg area to the ipsilateral fronto-medial supplemetary motor area. Our results, confirm, that the insula has a relay or node function on the parietal opercular-fronto-medial epileptic network. The connectome of the insula is a further additive of the scale-free features of the remote epileptic networks.
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- 2015
58. A maiden, a marriage and a pregnancy at Moldavian Hungarians
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Péter Halász
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- 2015
59. Increased interictal spike activity associated with transient slow wave trains during non-rapid eye movement sleep
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Anna Kelemen, Péter P. Ujma, Loránd Erőss, Róbert Bódizs, Raffaele Ferri, Péter Simor, Dániel Fabó, and Péter Halász
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Physiology ,Eye movement ,Electroencephalography ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,Sleep in non-human animals ,Non-rapid eye movement sleep ,Epilepsy ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Physiology (medical) ,medicine ,Ictal ,Neuroscience ,Electrocorticography - Abstract
Non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep is characterized by recurring transient events (Cyclic Alternating Patterns, CAP), some of which consist of increased slow wave activity (A1 subtype). Such transient slow-wave events may play an important role in NREM sleep regulation and are known to facilitate epileptiform activity. In our study we investigated the relationship between interictal spike activity and Cyclic Alternating Patterns in three epileptic patients, using simultaneous scalp electroencephalogram (EEG) recording and intracranial electrocorticography. A significant increase of interictal activity was found during CAP A1 subtypes. A positive correlation between scalp EEG delta power and spike activity was found only in CAP A1 subtypes, but not during other events. These results show that transient (but not subcontinuous) delta activity has a facilitating effect on epileptoform activity, also suggesting a functional dissociation between morphologically similar delta activities.
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- 2014
60. Savanyúié, galuska, édeslaska... Fejezetek a moldvai magyarok étkezési szokásaiból - II. rész.
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Péter, Halász
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- 2021
61. „A mentő néprajz a népkultúraváltás idején több, mint tudomány”.
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PÉTER, HALÁSZ
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- 2021
62. „Fortélyos félelem igazgat”.
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Péter, Halász
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- 2021
63. Epileptic interictal discharges are more frequent during NREM slow wave downstates
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Péter Halász, Anna Kelemen, Loránd Erőss, Péter P. Ujma, and Dániel Fabó
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0301 basic medicine ,Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Electroencephalography ,Non-rapid eye movement sleep ,03 medical and health sciences ,Epilepsy ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Rhythm ,medicine ,Humans ,Ictal ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,General Neuroscience ,Brain ,medicine.disease ,Sleep in non-human animals ,Brain Waves ,Electrophysiology ,030104 developmental biology ,Female ,Sleep Stages ,Psychology ,K-complex ,Sleep ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Epileptiform activity in various but not all epilepsy and recording types and cerebral areas is more frequent in NREM sleep, and especially during sleep periods with high-amplitude EEG slow waves. Slow waves synchronize high-frequency oscillations: physiological activity from the theta through the gamma band usually appears during scalp-positive upstates while epileptiform activity occurs at transitory phases and the scalp-negative downstate. It has been proposed that interictal discharges (IIDs) are facilitated by the high degree of neuronal firing synchrony during slow wave transitory and downstates. This would suggest that their occurrence increases as a function of slow wave synchronization, indicated by greater amplitude, steeper slopes and higher EEG signal synchronization. We investigated the occurrence of IIDs during NREM sleep slow waves in epileptic patients undergoing presurgical electrophysiological monitoring. Intracranially registered IIDs preferentially occurred during the scalp-negative downstates of frontal scalp slow waves in all subjects. IID occurrence was more frequent during larger slow waves in the pooled sample and a subset of subjects. However, slow wave slope steepness and EEG signal synchronization between two frontal scalp channels was not significantly associated with IID occurrence. Our results indicate that IIDs indeed do not occur at the same slow wave phase as physiological rhythms, but contrary to previous hypotheses their occurrence is not strongly affected by EEG synchronization.
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- 2017
64. Naturally Occurring Temporal Lobe Epilepsy in Cats
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Sibylle Kneissl, Akos Pakozdy, Andrea Klang, and Péter Halász
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Hippocampal sclerosis ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,CATS ,Limbic encephalitis ,Hippocampus ,medicine.disease ,Automatism (medicine) ,Hyperintensity ,Temporal lobe ,Epilepsy ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Neuroscience - Abstract
A wide variety of etiologies may cause different kinds of epileptic seizures in cats. The etiological grouping follows the human classification. Structural epilepsy, idiopathic epilepsy, epilepsy of unknown cause, and reactive epileptic seizures can be classified. Semiological classification is not established in feline medicine, however a subgroup of epileptic cats was recognized in the past decade. The evidence of spontaneous temporal lobe epilepsy in the cat is a relatively new finding in feline epilepsy research and clinical practice. Spontaneously occurring epileptic seizures associated with neuronal necrosis in the hippocampus and piriform lobe, in pet cats, were first described in Switzerland more than 15 years ago, and since then reported many times in different countries. Such cats clinically show complex partial seizures (CPS) with orofacial automatism: salivation, facial twitching, lip smacking, chewing, licking, and swallowing. Likewise, arrest, vegetative, and behavioral signs also occur. MRI data suggest bilateral hippocampal T1 hypointensity and T2 and FLAIR hyperintensity, in some cases. Histopathological findings include varying degrees of neuronal necrosis or sclerosis in the hippocampus. A recent study supports that limbic encephalitis associated with autoantibodies against the voltage-gated potassium channel (VGKC)-complex can be the etiology in some cases. Leucine-rich glioma-inactivated 1 (LGI1) was detected as target of the immune reaction in VGKC antibody positive cats. It should be considered that the cat may serve as an animal model for certain aspects of temporal lobe epilepsy in human medicine.
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- 2017
65. Two features of sleep slow waves: homeostatic and reactive aspects – from long term to instant sleep homeostasis
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Mario Giovanni Terzano, Róbert Bódizs, Liborio Parrino, and Péter Halász
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Communication ,Neuronal Plasticity ,business.industry ,Sleep regulation ,Cognition ,General Medicine ,Sleep in non-human animals ,Frontal lobe ,Sleep research ,Homeostasis ,Humans ,Sleep ,K-complex ,business ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,Instant - Abstract
In this paper we reviewed results of sleep research that have changed the views about sleep slow wave homeostasis, which involve use-dependent and experience-dependent local aspects to understand more of the physiology of plastic changes during sleep. Apart from the traditional homeostatic slow-wave economy, we also overviewed research on the existence and role of reactive aspects of sleep slow waves. Based on the results from spontaneous and artificially evoked slow waves, we offer a new hypothesis on instant slow wave homeostatic regulation. This regulation compensates for any potentially sleep-disturbing events by providing instant "delta injections" to maintain the nightly delta level, thus protecting cognitive functions located in the frontal lobe. We suggest that this double (long-term /instant) homeostasis provides double security for the frontal lobes in order to protect cognitive functions. The incorporation of reactive slow wave activity (SWA) makes sleep regulation more dynamic and provides more room for the internalization of external influences during sleep.
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- 2014
66. Epilepsy in Cats: Theory and Practice
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Péter Halász, Akos Pakozdy, and Andrea Klang
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Etiology ,Review ,Electroencephalography ,Cat Diseases ,Hippocampus ,Epilepsy ,Neuroimaging ,Seizures ,Diagnosis ,medicine ,Animals ,Medical diagnosis ,Psychiatry ,General Veterinary ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Terminology ,medicine.disease ,Seizure ,Cats ,Anticonvulsants ,Therapy ,business - Abstract
The veterinary literature on epilepsy in cats is less extensive than that for dogs. The present review summarizes the most important human definitions related to epilepsy and discusses the difficulties in applying them in daily veterinary practice. Epileptic seizures can have a wide range of clinical signs and are not necessarily typical in all cases. Whether a seizure event is epileptic can only be suspected based on clinical, laboratory, and neuroimaging findings as electroencephalography diagnostic techniques have not yet been developed to a sufficiently accurate level in veterinary medicine. In addition, the present review aims to describe other diagnoses and nonepileptic conditions that might be mistaken for epileptic seizures. Seizures associated with hippocampal lesions are described and discussed extensively, as they seem to be a special entity only recognized in the past few years. Furthermore, we focus on clinical work‐up and on treatment that can be recommended based on the literature and summarize the limited data available relating to the outcome. Critical commentary is provided as most studies are based on very weak evidence.
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- 2014
67. A hagyományos vadászat emlékei a moldvai magyaroknál.
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Péter, Halász
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- 2021
68. CSALÁDTERVEZÉS A HAGYOMÁNYOS MOLDVAI MAGYAR KÖZÖSSÉGEKBEN.
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PÉTER, HALÁSZ
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BIRTH control ,SOCIAL status ,SEXUAL intercourse ,CHILDBIRTH ,SOCIAL values - Abstract
The article is based on a field research carried out during five decades, and summarizes also the conclusions of the bibliography connected to the topic. Among the Moldavian Hungarians the birth of children was traditionally considered a blessing, women with no children were not considered fully accomplished women, therefore the spouses used rational practices but also magical practices to ensure conception and childbirth. A big family meant spiritual welfare, a stable social position, but also labour force for the family as an economic unit. With the women growing older however, birth control became more and more important for the families, the traditional methods for this being the reduction of the number of sexual intercourses, and interrupted intercourses. Since 1990, in the Moldavian Hungarian communities the social value of big families is decreasing, and other techniques of contraception and also abortions are implemented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
69. The role of NREM sleep micro-arousals in absence epilepsy and in nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy
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Péter Halász, Anna Szűcs, and Anna Kelemen
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Sleep induction ,Epilepsy, Frontal Lobe ,Polysomnography ,musculoskeletal, neural, and ocular physiology ,Autosomal dominant nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy ,medicine.disease ,Non-rapid eye movement sleep ,Arousal ,Epilepsy ,Epilepsy, Absence ,Neurology ,medicine ,Humans ,Wakefulness ,Ictal ,Sleep Stages ,Neurology (clinical) ,Sleep ,K-complex ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,psychological phenomena and processes - Abstract
The article summarises the role of input and consequent phasic events in the dynamism of non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep and in homeostatic slow-wave economy during sleep. Then, an overview of the mechanism of how micro-arousals in NREM sleep gate epileptic events in absence epilepsy (AE) and in sporadic and autosomal dominant nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy (NFLE/ADNFLE) is presented. The ictal type of generalised spike-wave discharges (SWDs) are associated with a special vigilance level in between NREM, rapid-eye movement (REM) and wake state. This transitional state is characterised by input-driven bidirectional fluctuations. Among them, SWDs are linked to A1 type A phases of CAP and therefore seem to be associated with shifts towards NREM sleep (sleep induction). In ADNFLE (and presumably in NFLE), micro-arousals release epileptic events in NREM sleep probably due to epileptic sensitisation of the cholinergic arousal system by the known acetylcholine (ACh) receptor mutations affecting the arousal system, giving rise to the epileptic (and also parasomniac) episodes. In both kinds of these system epilepsies (AE and NFLE), epileptic events can be released by phasic events during NREM sleep. The difference is that absences are activated in reactive states with a sleep-promoting, antiarousal effect, while in NFLE the epileptic disorder is interwoven with the cholinergic arousal function. The role of arousal/antiarousal in NFLE and AE fits nicely with the hypothesis that these epilepsies are disorders of two antagonistic thalamo-frontal systems involved in functions NREM sleep and wakefulness.
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- 2013
70. How Sleep Activates Epileptic Networks?
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Péter Halász
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Cognition ,Review Article ,medicine.disease ,Sleep in non-human animals ,Non-rapid eye movement sleep ,Epilepsy ,medicine ,Sleep research ,Ictal ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cognitive impairment ,Psychiatry ,business ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Background. The relationship between sleep and epilepsy has been long ago studied, and several excellent reviews are available. However, recent development in sleep research, the network concept in epilepsy, and the recognition of high frequency oscillations in epilepsy and more new results may put this matter in a new light. Aim. The review address the multifold interrelationships between sleep and epilepsy networks and with networks of cognitive functions. Material and Methods. The work is a conceptual update of the available clinical data and relevant studies. Results and Conclusions. Studies exploring dynamic microstructure of sleep have found important gating mechanisms for epileptic activation. As a general rule interictal epileptic manifestations seem to be linked to the slow oscillations of sleep and especially to the reactive delta bouts characterized by A1 subtype in the CAP system. Important link between epilepsy and sleep is the interference of epileptiform discharges with the plastic functions in NREM sleep. This is the main reason of cognitive impairment in different forms of early epileptic encephalopathies affecting the brain in a special developmental window. The impairment of cognitive functions via sleep is present especially in epileptic networks involving the thalamocortical system and the hippocampocortical memory encoding system.
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- 2013
71. Enhanced expression of potassium-chloride cotransporter KCC2 in human temporal lobe epilepsy
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Zsófia Maglóczky, Lucia Wittner, Péter Halász, Kinga Tóth, Mária R. Karlócai, György Rásonyi, Gábor Szabó, Kai Kaila, Loránd Erőss, Zoja Katarova, John A. Payne, Tamás F. Freund, and Sándor Czirják
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Dendritic spine ,KCC2 ,Medical Physiology ,Dendritic spine morphogenesis ,Neurodegenerative ,Hippocampus ,GABA ,Mice ,Epilepsy ,0302 clinical medicine ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Neurons ,Symporters ,General Neuroscience ,Pilocarpine ,Middle Aged ,Temporal Lobe ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neurological ,Cognitive Sciences ,Female ,Anatomy ,Adult ,Histology ,Interneuron ,Immunocytochemistry ,Biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Glutamatergic ,Human TLE ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Spinogenesis ,Aged ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Animal ,Neurosciences ,medicine.disease ,Actin cytoskeleton ,Brain Disorders ,Disease Models, Animal ,030104 developmental biology ,Ion homeostasis ,Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe ,nervous system ,Disease Models ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
© 2015, Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg. Synaptic reorganization in the epileptic hippocampus involves altered excitatory and inhibitory transmission besides the rearrangement of dendritic spines, resulting in altered excitability, ion homeostasis, and cell swelling. The potassium-chloride cotransporter-2 (KCC2) is the main chloride extruder in neurons and hence will play a prominent role in determining the polarity of GABAAreceptor-mediated chloride currents. In addition, KCC2 also interacts with the actin cytoskeleton which is critical for dendritic spine morphogenesis, and for the maintenance of glutamatergic synapses and cell volume. Using immunocytochemistry, we examined the cellular and subcellular levels of KCC2 in surgically removed hippocampi of temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) patients and compared them to control human tissue. We also studied the distribution of KCC2 in a pilocarpine mouse model of epilepsy. An overall increase in KCC2-expression was found in epilepsy and confirmed by Western blots. The cellular and subcellular distributions in control mouse and human samples were largely similar; moreover, changes affecting KCC2-expression were also alike in chronic epileptic human and mouse hippocampi. At the subcellular level, we determined the neuronal elements exhibiting enhanced KCC2 expression. In epileptic tissue, staining became more intense in the immunopositive elements detected in control tissue, and profiles with subthreshold expression of KCC2 in control samples became labelled. Positive interneuron somata and dendrites were more numerous in epileptic hippocampi, despite severe interneuron loss. Whether the elevation of KCC2-expression is ultimately a pro- or anticonvulsive change, or both—behaving differently during ictal and interictal states in a context-dependent manner—remains to be established.
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- 2016
72. EEG-confirmed epileptic activity in a cat with VGKC-complex/LGI1 antibody-associated limbic encephalitis
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Péter Halász, Bethan Lang, T Moloney, Michael Leschnik, Angela Vincent, Akos Pakozdy, Ursula Glantschnigg, and Harald Hechinger
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Electroencephalography ,Autoimmune Diseases ,Temporal lobe ,Epilepsy ,Seizures ,Limbic Encephalitis ,medicine ,Animals ,Ictal ,CATS ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Limbic encephalitis ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Hyperintensity ,Neurology ,Potassium Channels, Voltage-Gated ,Cats ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Epileptic seizure ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Neuroscience - Abstract
A 5-year-old, female client-owned cat presented with acute onset of focal epileptic seizures with orofacial twitching and behavioural changes. Magnetic resonance imaging showed bilateral temporal lobe hyperintensities and the EEG was consistent with ictal epileptic seizure activity. After antiepileptic and additional corticosteroid treatment, the cat recovered and by 10 months of follow-up was seizure-free without any problem. Retrospectively, antibodies to LGI1, a component of the voltage-gated potassium channel-complex, were identified. Feline focal seizures with orofacial involvement have been increasingly recognised in client-owned cats, and autoimmune limbic encephalitis was recently suggested as a possible aetiology. This is the first report of EEG, MRI and long-term follow-up of this condition in cats which is similar to human limbic encephalitis.
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- 2016
73. IgG and complement deposition and neuronal loss in cats and humans with epilepsy and voltage-gated potassium channel complex antibodies
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Péter Halász, Christian G. Bien, Zoltán Bagó, Sibylle Kneissl, Jan Bauer, T Moloney, Bethan Lang, Angela Vincent, Peter Schmidt, Akos Pakozdy, and Andrea Klang
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cell Count ,Hippocampal formation ,Hippocampus ,Immunoglobulin G ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Epilepsy ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Autoantibodies ,Neurons ,CATS ,Cell Death ,biology ,business.industry ,Limbic encephalitis ,Complement System Proteins ,General Medicine ,Voltage-gated potassium channel ,medicine.disease ,Potassium channel complex ,Neurology ,Potassium Channels, Voltage-Gated ,Cats ,biology.protein ,Anticonvulsants ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Encephalitis - Abstract
Voltage-gated potassium channel complex (VGKC-complex) antibody (Ab) encephalitis is a well-recognized form of limbic encephalitis in humans, usually occurring in the absence of an underlying tumor. The patients have a subacute onset of seizures, magnetic resonance imaging findings suggestive of hippocampal inflammation, and high serum titers of Abs against proteins of the VGKC-complex, particularly leucine-rich, glioma-inactivated 1 (LGI1). Most patients are diagnosed promptly and recover substantially with immunotherapies; consequently, neuropathological data are limited. We have recently shown that feline complex partial cluster seizures with orofacial involvement (FEPSO) in cats can also be associated with Abs against VGKC-complexes/LGI1. Here we examined the brains of cats with FEPSO and compared the neuropathological findings with those in a human with VGKC-complex-Ab limbic encephalitis. Similar to humans, cats with VGKC-complex-Ab and FEPSO have hippocampal lesions with only moderate T-cell infiltrates but with marked IgG infiltration and complement C9neo deposition on hippocampal neurons, associated with neuronal loss. These findings provide further evidence that FEPSO is a feline form of VGKC-complex-Ab limbic encephalitis and provide a model for increasing understanding of the human disease.
- Published
- 2016
74. LONG TERM FOLLOW-UP OF LESIONAL AND NON-LESIONAL PATIENTS WITH ELECTRICAL STATUS EPILEPTICUS IN SLOW WAVE SLEEP
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Márta Hegyi, Zsuzsa Siegler, Péter Halász, András Fogarasi, and Péter Barsi
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0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Adolescent ,Status epilepticus ,Electroencephalography ,Non-rapid eye movement sleep ,03 medical and health sciences ,Epilepsy ,0302 clinical medicine ,Status Epilepticus ,Seizures ,medicine ,Humans ,Ictal ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,Child ,Slow-wave sleep ,Retrospective Studies ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Seizure types ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Sleep deprivation ,030104 developmental biology ,Neurology ,Anesthesia ,Sleep Deprivation ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Sleep ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
OBJECTIVES A retrospective study has been done at the Bethesda Children's Hospital Epilepsy Center with those patients whose EEG records fulfilled in one or more records the criteria of electrical status epilepticus in slow wave sleep (ESES) pattern, occupying at least 75% of NREM sleep with bilateral discharges, and had detailed disease history and long term follow-up data, between 2000 and 2012. PATIENTS AND METHODS--Thirty-three patients (mean 11.1 +/- 4.2 years of age) were studied by 171 sleep EEG records. Sleep was recorded after sleep deprivation or during spontaneous sleep at least for one hour length of NREM. From the 492 EEGs, 171 sleep records were performed (average five/patient). Average follow-up time was 7.5 years. Eighty-two ESES records have been analyzed in 15 non-lesional and 18 lesional (11 with dysgenetic and seven with perinatal-asphyxic or vascular origin) patients. Variability of seizure types, seizure frequency and frequency of status epilepticus was higher in the lesional group. Impairment of the cognitive functions was moderate and partial in the non-lesional, while severely damaged in the lesional group. RESULTS EEG records of 29 patients shawed unihemispherial spike fields with a perpendicular axis (in anterior, medial and posterior variants) to the Sylvian fissure, regardless their lesional or non-lesional origin. Only three (lone nonlesional and two lesional) patients had bilateral synchronous spike-wave discharges with bilateral symmetric frontocentral spike fields. The individual discharges of the sleep EEG pattern were very similar to the awake interictal records except their extension in time and field, their increased number, amplitude, and continuity of them and furthermore in the increased trans-hemispheral propagation and their synchronity. CONCLUSIONS Assumed circuits involved in the pathomechanism of discharges during NREM sleep in ESES are discussed based on our findings.
- Published
- 2016
75. Definition and diagnostic criteria of sleep-related hypermotor epilepsy
- Author
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Liborio Parrino, Barbara Mostacci, Mark Mahowald, JH Cross, Samuel F. Berkovic, Philippe Ryvlin, Paolo Tinuper, Laura Tassi, Maura Pugliatti, Dale C. Hesdorffer, Raffaele Manni, Renzo Guerrini, Federica Provini, Ruth Ottman, Laura Licchetta, Philippe Kahane, Ilaria Naldi, Ingrid E. Scheffer, Marco Zucconi, Lino Nobili, Christopher P. Derry, Fabienne Picard, Claudio L. Bassetti, Carla Marini, Péter Halász, Fabio Cirignotta, Francesca Bisulli, Antonio Gambardella, Luca Vignatelli, Federico Vigevano, Tinuper, Paolo, Bisulli, Francesca, Cross, J.H., Hesdorffer, Dale, Kahane, Philippe, Nobili, Lino, Provini, Federica, Scheffer, Ingrid E., Tassi, Laura, Vignatelli, Luca, Bassetti, Claudio, Cirignotta, Fabio, Derry, Christopher, Gambardella, Antonio, Guerrini, Renzo, Halasz, Peter, Licchetta, Laura, Mahowald, Mark, Manni, Raffaele, Marini, Carla, Mostacci, Barbara, Naldi, Ilaria, Parrino, Liborio, Picard, Fabienne, Pugliatti, Maura, Ryvlin, Philippe, Vigevano, Federico, Zucconi, Marco, Berkovic, Samuel, and Ottman, Ruth
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,frontal lobe epilepsy ,consensus conference ,Video Recording ,610 Medicine & health ,Electroencephalography ,Sleep medicine ,NO ,epilepsy, frontal lobe epilepsy, consensus conference ,03 medical and health sciences ,Epilepsy ,0302 clinical medicine ,Terminology as Topic ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Psychogenic disease ,Humans ,Views & Reviews ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Medicine (all) ,Brain ,medicine.disease ,ddc:616.8 ,3. Good health ,030104 developmental biology ,Etiology ,Neurosurgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,Differential diagnosis ,Brain/physiopathology ,Epilepsy/diagnosis ,Epilepsy/etiology ,Epilepsy/genetics ,Epilepsy/physiopathology ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
The syndrome known as nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy is recognized worldwide and has been studied in a wide range of clinical and scientific settings (epilepsy, sleep medicine, neurosurgery, pediatric neurology, epidemiology, genetics). Though uncommon, it is of considerable interest to practicing neurologists because of complexity in differential diagnosis from more common, benign sleep disorders such as parasomnias, or other disorders like psychogenic nonepileptic seizures. Moreover, misdiagnosis can have substantial adverse consequences on patients' lives. At present, there is no consensus definition of this disorder and disagreement persists about its core electroclinical features and the spectrum of etiologies involved. To improve the definition of the disorder and establish diagnostic criteria with levels of certainty, a consensus conference using formal recommended methodology was held in Bologna in September 2014. It was recommended that the name be changed to sleep-related hypermotor epilepsy (SHE), reflecting evidence that the attacks are associated with sleep rather than time of day, the seizures may arise from extrafrontal sites, and the motor aspects of the seizures are characteristic. The etiology may be genetic or due to structural pathology, but in most cases remains unknown. Diagnostic criteria were developed with 3 levels of certainty: witnessed (possible) SHE, video-documented (clinical) SHE, and video-EEG-documented (confirmed) SHE. The main research gaps involve epidemiology, pathophysiology, treatment, and prognosis.
- Published
- 2016
76. Treatment and long-term follow-up of cats with suspected primary epilepsy
- Author
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Péter Halász, Michael Leschnik, Akos Pakozdy, Johann G. Thalhammer, Alexander Tichy, and Ali Asghar Sarchahi
- Subjects
Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Long term follow up ,Good control ,Cat Diseases ,Epilepsy ,Quality of life ,medicine ,Animals ,Small Animals ,CATS ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Treatment Outcome ,Poor control ,Anesthesia ,Cats ,Quality of Life ,Anticonvulsants ,Female ,Phenobarbital ,business ,After treatment ,Follow-Up Studies ,medicine.drug - Abstract
We report an evaluation of the treatment and outcome of cats with suspected primary epilepsy. Phenobarbital therapy was used alone or in combination with other anti-epileptic drugs. Outcome after treatment was evaluated mainly on the basis of number of seizures per year and categorised into four groups: seizure-free, good control (1–5 seizures per year), moderate control (6–10 seizures per year) and poor control (more than 10 seizures per year). About 40–50% of cases became seizure-free, 20–30% were considered good-to-moderately controlled and about 30% were poorly controlled depending on the year of treatment considered. The duration of seizure events after treatment decreased in 26/36 cats and was unchanged in eight cats. The subjective severity of seizure also decreased in 25 cats and was unchanged in nine cats. Twenty-six cats had a good quality of life, nine cats an impaired quality of life and one cat a bad quality of life. Despite being free of seizures for years, cessation of treatment may lead to recurrence of seizures in most cats.
- Published
- 2012
77. Efficacy and safety of eslicarbazepine acetate as add-on treatment in patients with focal-onset seizures: Integrated analysis of pooled data from double-blind phase III clinical studies
- Author
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Antonio Gil-Nagel, Patrício Soares‐ da‐Silva, Péter Halász, Luís Pereira de Almeida, Teresa G. Nunes, Christian E. Elger, Elinor Ben-Menachem, Alberto Alain Gabbai, José Lopes-Lima, and Amílcar Falcão
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Placebo ,law.invention ,Clinical trial ,Neurology ,Eslicarbazepine acetate ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Internal medicine ,Concomitant ,Anesthesia ,medicine ,Population study ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Somnolence ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Summary Purpose: To evaluate the efficacy and safety profile of eslicarbazepine acetate (ESL) added to stable antiepileptic therapy in adults with partial-onset seizures. Methods: Data from 1,049 patients enrolled from 125 centers, in 23 countries, in three phase III double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled studies were pooled and analyzed. Following a 2-week titration period, ESL was administered at 400 mg, 800 mg, and 1,200 mg once-daily doses for 12 weeks. Key Findings: Seizure frequency was significantly reduced with ESL 800 mg (p 10% patients) were dizziness, somnolence, and headache. The incidence of AEs in ESL groups compared to placebo was generally consistent among different subpopulations. Significance: Once-daily ESL 800 mg and 1,200 mg showed consistent results across all efficacy and safety end points. Results were independent of study population characteristics and type and number of concomitant AEDs.
- Published
- 2012
78. Előszó - I. rész: KÓKA ROZÁLIA: BUKOVINAI SZÉKELYEK A TÖRTÉNELEM ORSZÁGÚTJÁN. FEKETE SAS KIADÓ, BUDAPEST, 2022.
- Author
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Péter, Halász
- Published
- 2022
79. „Hej, meg kell fonnyad jól...!": A fűzvessző-fonás hagyományos mestersége a moldvai Pusztinában.
- Author
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Péter, Halász
- Published
- 2021
80. Comment on Neuronal networks in epileptic encephalopathies with CSWS
- Author
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Péter Halász
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Text mining ,Neurology ,business.industry ,Medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Published
- 2017
81. 'Jóregvel, harmatosan szedjed, ne szólj senkinek...' A gyógyító növények természetes erejét segítő hiedelmek a moldvai magyaroknál
- Author
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Péter Halász
- Published
- 2011
82. Long-term efficacy and safety of eslicarbazepine acetate: Results of a 1-year open-label extension study in partial-onset seizures in adults with epilepsy
- Author
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Péter Halász, Joana Maia, Danilo Hodoba, Christian E. Elger, Patrício Soares-da-Silva, Alla Guekht, Anna Członkowska, Luís Pereira de Almeida, and Joyce A. Cramer
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,education.field_of_study ,Intention-to-treat analysis ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Population ,medicine.disease ,Epilepsy ,Anticonvulsant ,Neurology ,Eslicarbazepine acetate ,Tolerability ,Internal medicine ,Anesthesia ,Montgomery–Åsberg Depression Rating Scale ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Adverse effect ,education ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Summary Purpose: To evaluate the long-term efficacy and safety of once daily eslicarbazepine acetate (ESL) as adjunctive therapy for partial-onset seizures in adults with epilepsy. Methods: One-year open-label treatment extension with ESL in patients who completed a placebo-controlled pivotal study (Epilepsia 2009; 50: 454–463). Starting dose was 800 mg once daily, for 4 weeks; thereafter, dose could be titrated up or down. Doses of concomitant antiepileptic drugs were to be kept stable. Results: Overall, 314 patients were enrolled. The intent-to-treat population consisted of 312 patients, and 239 (76.6%) completed 1 year of treatment. ESL median dose was 800 mg once daily. Compared to baseline, median seizure frequency decreased by 39% during the first 4 weeks and between 48% and 56% thereafter. The responder rate (≥50% seizure reduction) was 41% during weeks 1–4 and, thereafter ranged between 48% and 53%. The proportion of seizure-free patients per 12-week interval ranged between 8.7% and 12.5%. Quality of life, as measured by the Quality of Life in Epilepsy Inventory-31 (QOLIE-31), and depressive symptoms, as measured by the Montgomery Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS), improved significantly compared to baseline. Treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) were reported by 51% of patients. The most frequent TEAEs were headache (10%), dizziness (10%), diplopia (5%), and nasopharyngitis (5%). TEAEs were mostly (97%) of mild to moderate intensity. Eleven patients (3.5%) discontinued due to TEAEs. There were no results of laboratory tests raising safety concerns. Discussion: Sustained therapeutic effect, favorable tolerability and safety, and an improvement in quality of life and depressive symptoms were observed during long-term add-on treatment of partial-onset seizures in adults with once daily ESL.
- Published
- 2010
83. Dynamic changes of CB1-receptor expression in hippocampi of epileptic mice and humans
- Author
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Sándor Czirják, Vera Juhos, Péter Halász, Anna Kelemen, Tamás F. Freund, Sára Ágnes Nagy, János Vajda, Rita Karlócai, Kinga Tóth, Zsófia Maglóczky, Ken Mackie, György Rásonyi, and Loránd Erőss
- Subjects
Cannabinoid receptor ,Interneuron ,musculoskeletal, neural, and ocular physiology ,Dentate gyrus ,food and beverages ,Biology ,Endocannabinoid system ,Glutamatergic ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,nervous system ,Neurology ,medicine ,GABAergic ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Neurology (clinical) ,Synaptic signaling ,Axon ,Neuroscience ,psychological phenomena and processes - Abstract
The endocannabinoid system plays a central role in retrograde synaptic communication, and controls both glutamatergic and GABAergic transmission via type 1 cannabinoid receptors (CB1). Both in sclerotic human hippocampi and in the chronic phase of pilocarpine-induced epilepsy in mice with sclerosis, CB1 receptor-positive interneuron somata were preserved both in the dentate gyrus and in the CA1 area, and the density of CB1 immunostained fibers increased considerably in the dentate molecular layer. This suggests that, while CB1 receptors are known to be reduced in density on glutamatergic axons, the CB1 receptor-expressing GABAergic axons sprout, or there is an increase of CB1 receptor levels on these fibers. The changes of CB1 immunostaining in association with the GABAergic inhibitory system appears to correlate with the severity of pyramidal cell loss in the CA1 subfield. These results confirm the involvement of the endocannabinoid system associated with GABAergic transmission in human TLE, as well as in the chronic phase of the pilocarpine model in mice. Pharmacotherapy aimed at the modulation of endocannabinoid-mediated retrograde synaptic signaling should take into account the opposite change in CB1 receptor expression observed on glutamatergic versus GABAergic axon terminals.
- Published
- 2010
84. Outcome of vagus nerve stimulation for epilepsy in Budapest
- Author
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Péter Halász, Loránd Eross, László Entz, Anna Kelemen, György Rásonyi, Dániel Fabó, and Katalin Eszter Müller
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business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine.disease ,Vagus nerve ,Clinical trial ,Central nervous system disease ,Epilepsy ,Neurology ,Anesthesia ,Severity of illness ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Young adult ,Prospective cohort study ,business ,Vagus nerve stimulation - Abstract
Vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) is a nonpharmacologic therapeutic option for patients with intractable epilepsy. Better clinical outcomes were recorded in nonfocal and Lennox-Gastaut syndrome (LGS). We conducted a 2-year, open label, prospective study to measure the seizure outcome of 26 VNS patients. The seizure numbers were assessed using clinician's global impression scale (CGI) and patient diaries. The average seizure reduction was 23% at the first year and 22% at the second year. Seizure reduction was more pronounced among patients with nonfocal than with focal epilepsy. The response rate was 50% at first year and 30% at the second year. The best CGI record for clinically significant improvement was 15% in the LGS group. The only statistically significant result was the reduction of the generalized tonic-clonic seizures (GTCS). The side-effect profile was good; however, the large number of mild and reversible effects influenced the stimulation parameters and thus probably the effectiveness of the therapy. We suggest that VNS is an optional treatment mostly in cases of therapy-resistant Lennox-Gastaut syndrome. Patients with GTCS may experience improvement such as reduction of seizure severity. We conclude that VNS is a safe neuromodulatory treatment, but future developments of neuromodulatory approaches are needed.
- Published
- 2010
85. Loss and reorganization of calretinin-containing interneurons in the epileptic human hippocampus
- Author
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Zsófia Maglóczky, Loránd Eross, Kinga Tóth, Tamás F. Freund, János Vajda, and Péter Halász
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cell type ,Time Factors ,Adolescent ,Interneuron ,Central nervous system ,Cell Count ,Biology ,Inhibitory postsynaptic potential ,Hippocampus ,Temporal lobe ,Young Adult ,Epilepsy ,S100 Calcium Binding Protein G ,Microscopy, Electron, Transmission ,Interneurons ,medicine ,Humans ,Hippocampus (mythology) ,Cell Size ,Electroencephalography ,Original Articles ,Dendrites ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Axons ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe ,nervous system ,Calbindin 2 ,Postmortem Changes ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Calretinin ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Calretinin is expressed mainly in interneurons that specialize to innervate either principal cell dendrites or other interneurons in the human hippocampus. Calretinin-containing cells were shown to be vulnerable in animal models of ischaemia and epilepsy. In the human hippocampus, controversial data were published regarding their sensitivity in epilepsy. Therefore we aimed to reveal the fate of this cell type in human epileptic hippocampi. Surgically removed hippocampi of patients with drug-resistant temporal lobe epileptic (n = 44) were examined and compared to control (n = 8) samples with different post-mortem delays. The samples were immunostained for calretinin and the changes in the distribution, density and synaptic target selectivity of calretinin-positive cells were analysed. Control samples with post-mortem delays longer than 8 h resulted in a reduced number of immunolabelled cells compared to controls with short post-mortem delay. The number of calretinin-positive cells in the epileptic tissue was considerably decreased in correlation with the severity of principal cell loss. Preserved cells had segmented and shortened dendrites. Electron microscopic examination revealed that in controls, 23% of the calretinin-positive interneuronal terminals targeted calretinin-positive dendrites, whereas in the epileptic samples it was reduced to 3-5%. The number of contacts between calretinin-positive dendrites also dropped. The present quantitative data suggest that calretinin-containing cells in the human hippocampus are highly vulnerable, thus inhibition mediated by dendritic inhibitory cells and their synchronization by interneuron-specific interneurons may be impaired in epilepsy. We hypothesize that reorganization of the interneuron-selective cells may be implicated in the occurrence of seizures in non-sclerotic patients, where the majority of principal and non-principal cells are preserved.
- Published
- 2010
86. Introduction
- Author
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Péter Halász
- Published
- 2010
87. Adjunctive lacosamide for partial-onset seizures: Efficacy and safety results from a randomized controlled trial
- Author
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David Hebert, Pamela Doty, Maria Mazurkiewicz-Bełdzińska, Péter Halász, Felix Rosenow, Reetta Kälviäinen, and Timothy Sullivan
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,Lacosamide ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Population ,medicine.disease ,Placebo ,law.invention ,Epilepsy ,Anticonvulsant ,Neurology ,Randomized controlled trial ,Tolerability ,law ,Anesthesia ,Concomitant ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,education ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Summary Purpose: To evaluate the efficacy and safety of lacosamide (200 and 400 mg/day) when added to one to three concomitant antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) in patients with uncontrolled partial-onset seizures. Methods: This multicenter, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial randomized patients (age 16–70 years) with partial-onset seizures with or without secondary generalization to placebo, lacosamide 200, or lacosamide 400 mg/day. The trial consisted of an 8-week baseline, a 4-week titration, and a 12-week maintenance period. Results: Four hundred eighty-five patients were randomized and received trial medication. Among these, 87% were taking two or more concomitant AEDs. Median percent reduction in seizure frequency per 28 days from baseline to maintenance period (intent-to-treat, ITT) was 20.5% for placebo, 35.3% for lacosamide 200 mg/day (p = 0.02), and 36.4% for 400 mg/day (p = 0.03). In the per protocol population, the reductions were 35.3% for lacosamide 200 mg/day (p = 0.04) and 44.9% for 400 mg/day (p = 0.01) compared to placebo (25.4%). The 50% responder rate for lacosamide 400 mg/day (40.5%) was significant (p = 0.01) over placebo (25.8%), but was not for 200 mg/day (35.0%). In the per protocol population, the 50% responder rate for lacosamide 400 mg/day (46.3%) was significant (p
- Published
- 2009
88. Efficacy and safety of eslicarbazepine acetate as adjunctive treatment in adults with refractory partial-onset seizures: A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group phase III study
- Author
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Péter Halász, Joana Maia, Luís Pereira de Almeida, Christian E. Elger, and Patrício Soares-da-Silva
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions ,Metabolic Clearance Rate ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Lamotrigine ,Placebo ,Young Adult ,Double-Blind Method ,Dibenzazepines ,medicine ,Adverse Drug Reaction Reporting Systems ,Humans ,Aged ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Maintenance dose ,business.industry ,Drug Synergism ,Carbamazepine ,Middle Aged ,Clinical Science ,Treatment Outcome ,Anticonvulsant ,Neurology ,Eslicarbazepine acetate ,Anesthesia ,Concomitant ,Adjunctive treatment ,Anticonvulsants ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,Female ,Epilepsies, Partial ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Summary Purpose: To study the efficacy and safety of eslicarbazepine acetate (ESL) as adjunctive therapy for refractory partial seizures in adults with ≥4 partial-onset seizures (simple or complex, with or without secondary generalization) per 4 weeks despite treatment with 1–2 antiepileptic drugs (AEDs). Methods: This multicenter, parallel-group study had an 8-week, single-blind, placebo baseline phase, after which patients were randomized to placebo (n = 102) or once-daily ESL 400 mg (n = 100), 800 mg (n = 98), or 1,200 mg (n = 102) in the double-blind treatment phase. ESL starting dose was 400 mg; thereafter, ESL was titrated at weekly 400-mg steps to the full maintenance dose (12 weeks). Results: Seizure frequency adjusted per 4 weeks over the maintenance period (primary endpoint) was significantly lower than placebo in the ESL 1,200-mg (p = 0.0003) and 800-mg (p = 0.0028) groups [analysis of covariance (ANCOVA) of log-transformed seizure frequency]. Responder rate was 20% (placebo), 23% (400 mg), 34% (800 mg), and 43% (1,200 mg). Median relative reduction in seizure frequency was 16% (placebo), 26% (400 mg), 36% (800 mg), and 45% (1,200 mg). The most frequent concomitant AEDs were carbamazepine (56–62% of patients), lamotrigine (25–27%), and valproic acid (22–28%). Similar efficacy results were obtained in patients administered ESL with or without carbamazepine as concomitant AED. Discontinuation rates caused by adverse events (AEs) were 3.9% (placebo), 4% (400 mg), 8.2% (800 mg), and 19.6% (1,200 mg). AEs in >10% of any group were dizziness, headache, and diplopia. Most AEs were mild or moderate. Discussion: ESL, 800 and 1,200 mg once-daily, was well tolerated and more effective than placebo in patients who were refractory to treatment with one or two concomitant AEDs.
- Published
- 2009
89. Az alvás és az alvás alatti emlékezeti konszolidáció
- Author
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Péter Halász and Zsófia Clemens
- Subjects
Andrology ,business.industry ,Medicine ,Sleep spindle ,business ,General Psychology - Abstract
A tanulmány áttekinti azokat az érveket, amelyek szerint az alvás szakaszai sajátos mechanizmust képeznek a tanulási és emlékezeti konszolidáció számára. A REM-alvás szerepéről számos ellentmondó elképzelés született. Ugyanakkor az alvási _
- Published
- 2008
90. Memória és nyelvi funkciók temporális lebeny epilepsziában
- Author
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Péter Halász and Csaba Borbély
- Subjects
media_common.quotation_subject ,Art ,Humanities ,General Psychology ,media_common - Abstract
A tanulmány az emlékezeti és a nyelvi feldolgozó rendszereken keresztül foglalja össze a halántéklebeny epilepsziára (TLE) legjellemzőbb kognitív deficit-mintázatokat és ezek lehetséges okait. A temporális lebeny epilepszia, mint krónikus neurológiai betegség, a legtöbb esetben kimutatható változást (által__
- Published
- 2008
91. Properties of in vivo interictal spike generation in the human subiculum
- Author
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Loránd Eross, Anna Kelemen, Zsófia Maglóczky, Tamás F. Freund, János Vajda, Balazs Dombovari, Anna Szucs, György Rásonyi, Eric Halgren, G. Karmos, Dániel Fabó, Péter Halász, A. Solyom, Agnes Pék, Sándor Czirják, Lucia Wittner, István Ulbert, László Grand, and Vera Juhos
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Hippocampus ,Hippocampal formation ,Temporal lobe ,Intraoperative Period ,Neural Pathways ,medicine ,Humans ,Ictal ,Anterior temporal lobectomy ,Brain Mapping ,Chemistry ,Subiculum ,Electroencephalography ,Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Middle Aged ,Anterior Temporal Lobectomy ,Temporal Lobe ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe ,nervous system ,Excitatory postsynaptic potential ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Pyramidal cell ,Neuroscience - Abstract
A large proportion of hippocampal afferents and efferents are relayed through the subiculum. It is also thought to be a key structure in the generation and maintenance of epileptic activity; rhythmic interictal-like discharges were recorded in previous studies of subicular slices excised from temporal lobe epilepsy patients. In order to investigate if and how the subiculum is involved in the generation of epileptic discharges in vivo, subicular and lateral temporal lobe electrical activity were recorded under anesthesia in 11 drug-resistant epilepsy patients undergoing temporal lobectomy. Based on laminar field potential gradient, current source density, multiple unit activity (MUA) and spectral analyses, two types of interictal spikes were distinguished in the subiculum. The more frequently occurring spike started with an initial excitatory current (current source density sink) in the pyramidal cell layer associated with increased MUA in the same location, followed by later inhibitory currents (current source density source) and decreased MUA. In the other spike type, the initial excitation was confined to the apical dendritic region and it was associated with a less-prominent increase in MUA. Interictal spikes were highly synchronized at spatially distinct locations of the subiculum. Laminar data showed that the peak of the initial excitation occurred within 0-4 ms at subicular sites separated by 6 mm at the anterior-posterior axis. In addition, initial spike peak amplitudes were highly correlated in most recordings. A subset of subicular and temporal lobe spikes were also highly synchronous, in one case the subicular spikes reliably preceded the temporal lobe discharges. Our results indicate that multiple spike generator mechanisms exist in the human epileptic subiculum suggesting a complex network interplay between medial and lateral temporal structures during interictal epileptic activity. The observed widespread intra-subicular synchrony may reflect both of its intrinsic and extrinsically triggered activity supporting the hypothesis that subiculum may also play an active role in the distribution of epileptiform activity to other brain regions. Limited data suggest that subiculum might even play a pacemaker role in the generation of paroxysmal discharges.
- Published
- 2008
92. Age-Dependent Seizure Semiology in Temporal Lobe Epilepsy
- Author
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Anna Kelemen, Péter Halász, András Fogarasi, György Rásonyi, Imre Janszky, József Janszky, and Ingrid Tuxhorn
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Hippocampal sclerosis ,Aura ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Audiology ,medicine.disease ,Temporal lobe ,Epilepsy ,Neurology ,Temporal lobe seizure ,Anesthesia ,medicine ,Ictal ,Neurology (clinical) ,Epileptic seizure ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Anterior temporal lobectomy - Abstract
Summary: Objective: To examine the effects of age on different aspects of temporal lobe seizure semiology. Methods: We performed a video analysis of 605 archived seizures from 155 consecutive patients (age 10 months to 49 years) selected by seizure freedom after temporal lobectomy. Eighty patients had hippocampal sclerosis (HS). Beside semiological seizure classification, we assessed age dependency of several axes of seizure semiology: (1) aura, (2) number of different lateralizing signs, occurrence of ictal (3) emotional signs, (4) autonomic symptoms, (5) automatisms, and (6) secondary generalization as well as (7) the ratio of motor seizure components. Results: From the 155 patients, 117 reported aura, 39 had ictal emotional signs, 51 had autonomic symptoms, 130 presented automatisms, while 18 patients showed secondary generalization at least once during their seizures. Altogether 369 (median: 2/patient) different lateralizing signs were recorded. Frequency of HS (p < 0.001), ictal automatisms (p < 0.001), secondary generalization (p = 0.014), number of different lateralizing signs (p < 0.001) increased while the ratio of motor seizure component (p = 0.007) decreased by age. Auras, emotional symptoms, and autonomic signs occurred independently of patients’ ages. Hippocampal sclerosis adjusted linear models revealed that the frequency of automatisms and secondarily generalized seizures as well as the number of different lateralizing signs are HSindependent significant variables. Conclusion: Our findings support that brain maturation significantly influences the evolution of some important aspects (motor seizures, lateralizing signs) of temporal lobe seizure semiology. Conversely, other aspects (aura, emotional, and autonomic signs) are independent of the maturation process. This is the first report investigating age dependency of epileptic seizure semiology comparing all age groups. Key Words: Temporal lobe epilepsy—Seizure semiology—Age.
- Published
- 2007
93. Bilateral Dentate Gyrus Structural Alterations in a Cat Associated With Hippocampal Sclerosis and Intraventricular Meningioma
- Author
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Andrea Klang, Péter Halász, Peter Schmidt, Gabor G. Kovacs, D. Thaller, and Akos Pakozdy
- Subjects
Hippocampal sclerosis ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Sclerosis ,General Veterinary ,business.industry ,Dentate gyrus ,Hippocampus ,Limbic lobe ,Hippocampal formation ,medicine.disease ,Temporal lobe ,Meningioma ,Epilepsy ,Seizures ,Anesthesia ,Dentate Gyrus ,medicine ,Cats ,Meningeal Neoplasms ,Animals ,business - Abstract
A 13-year-old cat had a history of seizures for 3 years that resembled temporal lobe epilepsy. Histologic examination of the brain revealed bilateral hippocampal alterations, including hypergyration and broadening of the dentate gyrus associated with hippocampal sclerosis and an intraventricular meningioma near the hippocampal region. The findings in the dentate gyrus were interpreted as a congenital malformation; however, it could not be ruled out that the alterations were induced by the seizures. Similar changes of the dentate gyrus have not been previously described in cats.
- Published
- 2015
94. Venczel József Hitel-es üzenetei.
- Author
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Péter, Halász
- Published
- 2020
95. A moldvai csángómagyarok karácsonyi népszokásairól.
- Author
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Péter, Halász
- Published
- 2020
96. „Ha leánka lesz, ha fijú, add ide nekem keresztelni...!" A gyermek keresztelése a moldvai magyaroknál.
- Author
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Péter, Halász
- Published
- 2020
97. Az „észre"...
- Author
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Péter, Halász
- Published
- 2020
98. Electrode manipulation automatism during temporal lobe seizures
- Author
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András Fogarasi, György Rásonyi, József Janszky, Anna Kelemen, and Péter Halász
- Subjects
Adult ,Manual automatism ,Consciousness ,Adolescent ,Dystonic posturing ,Electrode manipulation ,Video Recording ,Clinical Neurology ,Seizure onset zone ,Automatism (medicine) ,Temporal lobe surgery ,Temporal lobe ,Epilepsy ,Seizures ,medicine ,Humans ,Ictal ,In patient ,Temporal lobe epilepsy ,Child ,Electrodes ,Electroencephalography ,General Medicine ,Automatism ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Lateralizing sign ,nervous system diseases ,nervous system ,Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe ,Neurology ,Anesthesia ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology - Abstract
Summary Objective To describe clinical characteristics and lateralizing value of peri-ictal electrode manipulation automatism (EMA) in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) and compare our data with ictal manual automatisms described in the literature. Methods Two-hundred and five videotaped seizures of 55 consecutive patients with refractory TLE and postoperatively seizure-free outcome were analyzed and EMA (tugging, scratching or adjusting the electrodes and cables) were monitored. Results Twenty-eight (51%) patients showed EMA during 47 (23%) seizures. Ictal start was noted in 22 seizures and in 19/22 cases EMA finished before the end of seizure. Ictal EMAs were always associated with automotor seizure components. During 25 seizures, exclusively postictal EMAs were observed. Electrode manipulation was presented during 24/112 left-sided and 23/93 right-sided seizures ( p =0.742). Peri-ictal EMA was unilateral (completed by one hand) in 24/47 seizures (10 ictal, 14 postictal); it was done by the hand ipsilateral to the seizure onset zone in 17/24 and by contralateral hand in 7/24 cases ( p =0.064). We observed concomitant contralateral dystonic posturing during 3/10 seizures with unilateral ictal EMA. Unilateral hand automatism, temporally independent from the EMA appeared in 30 (64%) of the 47 seizures. Conclusion Peri-ictal EMA is a frequent phenomenon but shows no lateralizing value in TLE. The mechanism of EMA is in many ways dissimilar from that of earlier described manual automatisms.
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- 2006
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99. CAP, epilepsy and motor events during sleep: the unifying role of arousal
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Mario Giovanni Terzano, Liborio Parrino, Péter Halász, Carlo Alberto Tassinari, PARRINO L., HALASZ P., TASSINARI C.A., and TERZANO M.G.
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Epilepsy, Frontal Lobe ,Polysomnography ,Sleep spindle ,Motor Activity ,Autonomic Nervous System ,Non-rapid eye movement sleep ,Arousal ,Heart Rate ,Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders ,Physiology (medical) ,medicine ,Humans ,Neuroscience of sleep ,Sleep Apnea, Obstructive ,Sleep Stages ,Epilepsy ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Brain ,Electroencephalography ,Delta Rhythm ,Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) ,Psychology ,K-complex ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Arousal systems play a topical neurophysiologic role in protecting and tailoring sleep duration and depth. When they appear in NREM sleep, arousal responses are not limited to a single EEG pattern but are part of a continuous spectrum of EEG modifications ranging from high-voltage slow rhythms to low amplitude fast activities. The hierarchic features of arousal responses are reflected in the phase A subtypes of CAP (cyclic alternating pattern) including both slow arousals (dominated by the
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- 2006
100. Twenty-four hours retention of visuospatial memory correlates with the number of parietal sleep spindles
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Péter Halász, Zsófia Clemens, and Dániel Fabó
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Adult ,Male ,Brain Mapping ,medicine.medical_specialty ,General Neuroscience ,Electroencephalography ,Sleep spindle ,Middle Aged ,Audiology ,Non-rapid eye movement sleep ,Spatial memory ,Visual memory ,Memory ,Parietal Lobe ,Mental Recall ,Visual Perception ,medicine ,Humans ,Memory consolidation ,Effects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performance ,Sleep ,Psychology ,K-complex ,Neuroscience of sleep ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Recent evidence suggests that the sleep-dependent consolidation of declarative memories relies on the non-rapid eye movement (NREM) rather than the rapid eye movement (REM) phase of sleep. Moreover, a few studies both at the cellular and the behavioural levels have suggested the involvement of sleep spindles, the most synchronous oscillatory waveforms during NREM sleep stage 2, in this process. Our previous study showed that overnight verbal memory retention correlates with the total number of sleep spindles in left frontocentral areas, while spindling in other regions did not correlate with mnemonic retention. In the present study, we show that retention of visuospatial memories over a 24-h period correlates with the total number of sleep spindles detected over parietal regions during the intervening night-time sleep. This result provides further evidence for the association between sleep spindle activity and declarative memory consolidation, and suggests that visuospatial and verbal memory retention differ in the topographic distribution of the NREM spindle activity with which they are associated.
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- 2006
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