24 results on '"Dlugos D. J."'
Search Results
2. Polygenic burden in focal and generalized epilepsies
- Author
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Leu C., Stevelink R., Smith A. W., Goleva S. B., Kanai M., Ferguson L., Campbell C., Kamatani Y., Okada Y., Sisodiya S. M., Cavalleri G. L., Koeleman B. P. C., Lerche H., Jehi L., Davis L. K., Najm I. M., Palotie A., Daly M. J., Busch R. M., Lal D., Feng Y. -C. A., Howrigan D. P., Abbott L. E., Tashman K., Cerrato F., Churchhouse C., Gupta N., Neale B. M., Berkovic S. F., Goldstein D. B., Lowenstein D. H., Cossette P., Cotsapas C., De Jonghe P., Dixon-Salazar T., Guerrini R., Hakonarson H., Heinzen E. L., Helbig I., Kwan P., Marson A. G., Petrovski S., Kamalakaran S., Stewart R., Weckhuysen S., Depondt C., Dlugos D. J., Scheffer I. E., Striano P., Freyer C., Krause R., May P., McKenna K., Regan B. M., Bellows S. T., Bennett C. A., Johns E. M. C., Macdonald A., Shilling H., Burgess R., Weckhuysen D., Bahlo M., O'Brien T. J., Todaro M., Stamberger H., Andrade D. M., Sadoway T. R., Mo K., Krestel H., Gallati S., Papacostas S. S., Kousiappa I., Tanteles G. A., Sterbova K., Vlckova M., Sedlackova L., Lassuthova P., Klein K. M., Rosenow F., Reif P. S., Knake S., Kunz W. S., Zsurka G., Elger C. E., Bauer J., Rademacher M., Pendziwiat M., Muhle H., Rademacher A., Van Baalen A., Von Spiczak S., Stephani U., Afawi Z., Korczyn A. D., Kanaan M., Canavati C., Kurlemann G., Muller-Schluter K., Kluger G., Hausler M., Blatt I., Lemke J. R., Krey I., Weber Y. G., Wolking S., Becker F., Hengsbach C., Rau S., Maisch A. F., Steinhoff B. J., Schulze-Bonhage A., Schubert-Bast S., Schreiber H., Borggrafe I., Schankin C. J., Mayer T., Korinthenberg R., Brockmann K., Dennig D., Madeleyn R., Kalviainen R., Auvinen P., Saarela A., Linnankivi T., Lehesjoki A. -E., Rees M. I., Chung S. -K., Pickrell W. O., Powell R., Schneider N., Balestrini S., Zagaglia S., Braatz V., Johnson M. R., Auce P., Sills G. J., Baum L. W., Sham P. C., Cherny S. S., Lui C. H. T., Barisic N., Delanty N., Doherty C. P., Shukralla A., McCormack M., El-Naggar H., Canafoglia L., Franceschetti S., Castellotti B., Granata T., Zara F., Iacomino M., Madia F., Vari M. S., Mancardi M. M., Salpietro V., Bisulli F., Tinuper P., Licchetta L., Pippucci T., Stipa C., Muccioli L., Minardi R., Gambardella A., Labate A., Annesi G., Manna L., Gagliardi M., Parrini E., Mei D., Vetro A., Bianchini C., Montomoli M., Doccini V., Marini C., Suzuki T., Inoue Y., Yamakawa K., Birute T., Ruta M., Algirdas U., Ruta P., Jurgita G., Ruta S., Sadleir L. G., King C., Mountier E., Caglayan S. H., Arslan M., Yapici Z., Yis U., Topaloglu P., Kara B., Turkdogan D., Gundogdu-Eken A., Bebek N., Ugur-Iseri S., Baykan B., Salman B., Haryanyan G., Yucesan E., Kesim Y., Ozkara C., Sheidley B. R., Shain C., Poduri A., Buono R. J., Ferraro T. N., Sperling M. R., Lo W., Privitera M., French J. A., Schachter S., Kuzniecky R. I., Devinsky O., Hegde M., Khankhanian P., Helbig K. L., Ellis C. A., Spalletta G., Piras F., Gili T., Ciullo V., Leu C., Stevelink R., Smith A.W., Goleva S.B., Kanai M., Ferguson L., Campbell C., Kamatani Y., Okada Y., Sisodiya S.M., Cavalleri G.L., Koeleman B.P.C., Lerche H., Jehi L., Davis L.K., Najm I.M., Palotie A., Daly M.J., Busch R.M., Lal D., Feng Y.-C.A., Howrigan D.P., Abbott L.E., Tashman K., Cerrato F., Churchhouse C., Gupta N., Neale B.M., Berkovic S.F., Goldstein D.B., Lowenstein D.H., Cossette P., Cotsapas C., De Jonghe P., Dixon-Salazar T., Guerrini R., Hakonarson H., Heinzen E.L., Helbig I., Kwan P., Marson A.G., Petrovski S., Kamalakaran S., Stewart R., Weckhuysen S., Depondt C., Dlugos D.J., Scheffer I.E., Striano P., Freyer C., Krause R., May P., McKenna K., Regan B.M., Bellows S.T., Bennett C.A., Johns E.M.C., Macdonald A., Shilling H., Burgess R., Weckhuysen D., Bahlo M., O'Brien T.J., Todaro M., Stamberger H., Andrade D.M., Sadoway T.R., Mo K., Krestel H., Gallati S., Papacostas S.S., Kousiappa I., Tanteles G.A., Sterbova K., Vlckova M., Sedlackova L., Lassuthova P., Klein K.M., Rosenow F., Reif P.S., Knake S., Kunz W.S., Zsurka G., Elger C.E., Bauer J., Rademacher M., Pendziwiat M., Muhle H., Rademacher A., Van Baalen A., Von Spiczak S., Stephani U., Afawi Z., Korczyn A.D., Kanaan M., Canavati C., Kurlemann G., Muller-Schluter K., Kluger G., Hausler M., Blatt I., Lemke J.R., Krey I., Weber Y.G., Wolking S., Becker F., Hengsbach C., Rau S., Maisch A.F., Steinhoff B.J., Schulze-Bonhage A., Schubert-Bast S., Schreiber H., Borggrafe I., Schankin C.J., Mayer T., Korinthenberg R., Brockmann K., Dennig D., Madeleyn R., Kalviainen R., Auvinen P., Saarela A., Linnankivi T., Lehesjoki A.-E., Rees M.I., Chung S.-K., Pickrell W.O., Powell R., Schneider N., Balestrini S., Zagaglia S., Braatz V., Johnson M.R., Auce P., Sills G.J., Baum L.W., Sham P.C., Cherny S.S., Lui C.H.T., Barisic N., Delanty N., Doherty C.P., Shukralla A., McCormack M., El-Naggar H., Canafoglia L., Franceschetti S., Castellotti B., Granata T., Zara F., Iacomino M., Madia F., Vari M.S., Mancardi M.M., Salpietro V., Bisulli F., Tinuper P., Licchetta L., Pippucci T., Stipa C., Muccioli L., Minardi R., Gambardella A., Labate A., Annesi G., Manna L., Gagliardi M., Parrini E., Mei D., Vetro A., Bianchini C., Montomoli M., Doccini V., Marini C., Suzuki T., Inoue Y., Yamakawa K., Birute T., Ruta M., Algirdas U., Ruta P., Jurgita G., Ruta S., Sadleir L.G., King C., Mountier E., Caglayan S.H., Arslan M., Yapici Z., Yis U., Topaloglu P., Kara B., Turkdogan D., Gundogdu-Eken A., Bebek N., Ugur-Iseri S., Baykan B., Salman B., Haryanyan G., Yucesan E., Kesim Y., Ozkara C., Sheidley B.R., Shain C., Poduri A., Buono R.J., Ferraro T.N., Sperling M.R., Lo W., Privitera M., French J.A., Schachter S., Kuzniecky R.I., Devinsky O., Hegde M., Khankhanian P., Helbig K.L., Ellis C.A., Spalletta G., Piras F., Gili T., Ciullo V., Commission of the European Communities, Medical Research Council (MRC), Tumienė, Birutė, Mameniškienė, Rūta, Utkus, Algirdas, Praninskienė, Rūta, Grikinienė, Jurgita, Samaitienė-Aleknienė, Rūta, Centre of Excellence in Complex Disease Genetics, Aarno Palotie / Principal Investigator, Institute for Molecular Medicine Finland, Genomics of Neurological and Neuropsychiatric Disorders, University of Helsinki, Helsinki Institute of Life Science HiLIFE, and Department of Medical and Clinical Genetics
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0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Multifactorial Inheritance ,Epi25 Consortium ,Databases, Factual ,FEATURES ,Genome-wide association study ,Epilepsies ,3124 Neurology and psychiatry ,Cohort Studies ,Epilepsy ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cost of Illness ,1ST SEIZURE ,HISTORY ,genetics ,POPULATION ,11 Medical and Health Sciences ,education.field_of_study ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,SCORES ,Single Nucleotide ,Biobank ,3. Good health ,17 Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Genetic generalized epilepsy ,Epilepsy, Generalized ,Female ,Partial ,Cohort study ,Human ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Population ,European Continental Ancestry Group ,Clinical Neurology ,BIOBANK ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,epilepsy ,genetic generalized epilepsy ,common variant risk ,Databases ,03 medical and health sciences ,Genetic ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Journal Article ,Genetics ,Humans ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Polymorphism ,GENOME-WIDE ASSOCIATION ,Generalized epilepsy ,education ,SEIZURE RECURRENCE ,Factual ,METAANALYSIS ,Genetic testing ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,RISK PREDICTION ,Generalized ,business.industry ,3112 Neurosciences ,Common variant risk ,Genetic Variation ,Original Articles ,medicine.disease ,Comorbidity ,Cost of Illne ,Epilepsies, Partial ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,030104 developmental biology ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cohort Studie ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
See Hansen and Møller (doi:10.1093/brain/awz318) for a scientific commentary on this article. Using polygenic risk scores from a genome-wide association study in generalized and focal epilepsy, Leu et al. reveal a significantly higher genetic burden for epilepsy in multiple cohorts of people with epilepsy compared to population controls. Quantification of common variant burden may be valuable for epilepsy prognosis and treatment., Rare genetic variants can cause epilepsy, and genetic testing has been widely adopted for severe, paediatric-onset epilepsies. The phenotypic consequences of common genetic risk burden for epilepsies and their potential future clinical applications have not yet been determined. Using polygenic risk scores (PRS) from a European-ancestry genome-wide association study in generalized and focal epilepsy, we quantified common genetic burden in patients with generalized epilepsy (GE-PRS) or focal epilepsy (FE-PRS) from two independent non-Finnish European cohorts (Epi25 Consortium, n = 5705; Cleveland Clinic Epilepsy Center, n = 620; both compared to 20 435 controls). One Finnish-ancestry population isolate (Finnish-ancestry Epi25, n = 449; compared to 1559 controls), two European-ancestry biobanks (UK Biobank, n = 383 656; Vanderbilt biorepository, n = 49 494), and one Japanese-ancestry biobank (BioBank Japan, n = 168 680) were used for additional replications. Across 8386 patients with epilepsy and 622 212 population controls, we found and replicated significantly higher GE-PRS in patients with generalized epilepsy of European-ancestry compared to patients with focal epilepsy (Epi25: P = 1.64×10−15; Cleveland: P = 2.85×10−4; Finnish-ancestry Epi25: P = 1.80×10−4) or population controls (Epi25: P = 2.35×10−70; Cleveland: P = 1.43×10−7; Finnish-ancestry Epi25: P = 3.11×10−4; UK Biobank and Vanderbilt biorepository meta-analysis: P = 7.99×10−4). FE-PRS were significantly higher in patients with focal epilepsy compared to controls in the non-Finnish, non-biobank cohorts (Epi25: P = 5.74×10−19; Cleveland: P = 1.69×10−6). European ancestry-derived PRS did not predict generalized epilepsy or focal epilepsy in Japanese-ancestry individuals. Finally, we observed a significant 4.6-fold and a 4.5-fold enrichment of patients with generalized epilepsy compared to controls in the top 0.5% highest GE-PRS of the two non-Finnish European cohorts (Epi25: P = 2.60×10−15; Cleveland: P = 1.39×10−2). We conclude that common variant risk associated with epilepsy is significantly enriched in multiple cohorts of patients with epilepsy compared to controls—in particular for generalized epilepsy. As sample sizes and PRS accuracy continue to increase with further common variant discovery, PRS could complement established clinical biomarkers and augment genetic testing for patient classification, comorbidity research, and potentially targeted treatment.
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- 2019
3. Randomized dose-controlled study of topiramate as first-line therapy in epilepsy
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Arroyo, S., Dodson, W. E., Privitera, M. D., Glauser, T. A., Naritoku, D. K., Dlugos, D. J., Wang, S., Schwabe, S. K., and Twyman, R. E.
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- 2005
4. Assessing the similarity of surface linguistic features related to epilepsy across pediatric hospitals
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Connolly, B., primary, Matykiewicz, P., additional, Bretonnel Cohen, K., additional, Standridge, S. M., additional, Glauser, T. A., additional, Dlugos, D. J., additional, Koh, S., additional, Tham, E., additional, and Pestian, J., additional
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- 2014
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5. Electrographic status epilepticus and long-term outcome in critically ill children
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Wagenman, K. L., primary, Blake, T. P., additional, Sanchez, S. M., additional, Schultheis, M. T., additional, Radcliffe, J., additional, Berg, R. A., additional, Dlugos, D. J., additional, Topjian, A. A., additional, and Abend, N. S., additional
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- 2014
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6. Electrographic seizures in pediatric ICU patients: Cohort study of risk factors and mortality
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Abend, N. S., primary, Arndt, D. H., additional, Carpenter, J. L., additional, Chapman, K. E., additional, Cornett, K. M., additional, Gallentine, W. B., additional, Giza, C. C., additional, Goldstein, J. L., additional, Hahn, C. D., additional, Lerner, J. T., additional, Loddenkemper, T., additional, Matsumoto, J. H., additional, McBain, K., additional, Nash, K. B., additional, Payne, E., additional, Sanchez, S. M., additional, Fernandez, I. S., additional, Shults, J., additional, Williams, K., additional, Yang, A., additional, and Dlugos, D. J., additional
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- 2013
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7. Nonconvulsive seizures are common in critically ill children
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Abend, N. S., primary, Gutierrez-Colina, A. M., additional, Topjian, A. A., additional, Zhao, H., additional, Guo, R., additional, Donnelly, M., additional, Clancy, R. R., additional, and Dlugos, D. J., additional
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- 2011
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8. Electroencephalographic monitoring during hypothermia after pediatric cardiac arrest
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Abend, N. S., primary, Topjian, A., additional, Ichord, R., additional, Herman, S. T., additional, Helfaer, M., additional, Donnelly, M., additional, Nadkarni, V., additional, Dlugos, D. J., additional, and Clancy, R. R., additional
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- 2009
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9. Acute cerebellar ataxia due to Sjögren syndrome
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Wong, S., primary, Pollock, A. N., additional, Burnham, J. M., additional, Sherry, D. D., additional, and Dlugos, D. J., additional
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- 2004
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10. Dysplasia
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Porter, B. E., primary, Judkins, A. R., additional, Clancy, R. R., additional, Duhaime, A., additional, Dlugos, D. J., additional, and Golden, J. A., additional
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- 2003
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11. Response to first drug trial predicts outcome in childhood temporal lobe epilepsy
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Dlugos, D. J., primary, Sammel, M. D., additional, Strom, B. L., additional, and Farrar, J. T., additional
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- 2001
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12. Subacute Sclerosing Panencephalitis in an American-Born Adult
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Dlugos, D. J., primary and Liu, G. T., additional
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- 2001
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13. An EEG should not be obtained routinely after first unprovoked seizure in childhood
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Berg, A. T., primary, Arts, W., additional, Boulloche, J., additional, Camfield, C. S., additional, Camfield, P., additional, Jallon, P., additional, Loiseau, J., additional, Loiseau, P., additional, Shinnar, S., additional, Dlugos, D. J., additional, Gilbert, D. L., additional, and Buncher, C. R., additional
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- 2000
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14. Dysplasia: a common finding in intractable pediatric temporal lobe epilepsy.
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Porter BE, Judkins AR, Clancy RR, Duhaime A, Dlugos DJ, Golden JA, Porter, B E, Judkins, A R, Clancy, R R, Duhaime, A, Dlugos, D J, and Golden, J A
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- 2003
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15. Electroencephalographic monitoring during hypothermia after pediatric cardiac arrest.
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Klotz JM, Carvalho NR, Gilbert DL, Abend NS, Topjian A, Ichord R, Herman ST, Helfaer M, Donnelly M, Nadkarni V, Dlugos DJ, and Clancy RR
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- Child, Humans, Pediatrics, Electroencephalography methods, Heart Arrest therapy, Hypothermia, Induced, Monitoring, Physiologic
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- 2010
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16. Magnetoencephalography for pediatric epilepsy: how we do it.
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Schwartz ES, Dlugos DJ, Storm PB, Dell J, Magee R, Flynn TP, Zarnow DM, Zimmerman RA, and Roberts TP
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- Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Pediatrics instrumentation, Pediatrics methods, Brain Mapping methods, Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted methods, Epilepsy diagnosis, Magnetoencephalography methods
- Abstract
Magnetoencephalography (MEG) is increasingly being used in the preoperative evaluation of pediatric patients with epilepsy. The ability to noninvasively localize ictal onset zones (IOZ) and their relationships to eloquent functional cortex allows the pediatric epilepsy team to more accurately assess the likelihood of postoperative seizure freedom, while more precisely prognosticating the potential functional deficits that may be expected from resective surgery. Confirmation of clinically suggested multifocality may result in a recommendation against resective surgery because the probability of seizure freedom will be low. Current paradigms for motor and somatosensory testing are robust. Paradigms allowing localization of those regions necessary for competent language function, though promising, are under continuous optimization. MR imaging white matter trajectory data, created from diffusion tensor imaging obtained in the same setting as the localization brain MR imaging, provide ancillary information regarding connectivity of the IOZ to sites of rapid secondary spread and the spatial relationship of the IOZ to functionally important white matter bundles, such as the corticospinal tracts. A collaborative effort between neuroradiology, neurology, neurosurgery, neuropsychology, technology, and physics ensures successful implementation of MEG within a pediatric epilepsy program.
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- 2008
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17. Association between variation in the human KCNJ10 potassium ion channel gene and seizure susceptibility.
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Buono RJ, Lohoff FW, Sander T, Sperling MR, O'Connor MJ, Dlugos DJ, Ryan SG, Golden GT, Zhao H, Scattergood TM, Berrettini WH, and Ferraro TN
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- Chi-Square Distribution, Confidence Intervals, Gene Frequency genetics, Genotype, Humans, Odds Ratio, Quantitative Trait Loci genetics, Genetic Predisposition to Disease genetics, Genetic Variation genetics, Potassium Channels genetics, Potassium Channels, Inwardly Rectifying, Seizures genetics
- Abstract
Purpose: Our research program uses genetic linkage and association analysis to identify human seizure sensitivity and resistance alleles. Quantitative trait loci mapping in mice led to identification of genetic variation in the potassium ion channel gene Kcnj10, implicating it as a putative seizure susceptibility gene. The purpose of this work was to translate these animal model data to a human genetic association study., Methods: We used single stranded conformation polymorphism (SSCP) electrophoresis, DNA sequencing and database searching (NCBI) to identify variation in the human KCNJ10 gene. Restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis, SSCP and Pyrosequencing were used to genotype a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP, dbSNP rs#1130183) in KCNJ10 in epilepsy patients (n = 407) and unrelated controls (n = 284). The epilepsy group was comprised of patients with refractory mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (n = 153), childhood absence (n = 84), juvenile myoclonic (n = 111) and idiopathic generalized epilepsy not otherwise specified (IGE-NOS, n = 59) and all were of European ancestry., Results: SNP rs#1130183 (C > T) alters amino acid 271 (of 379) from an arginine to a cysteine (R271C). The C allele (Arg) is common with conversion to the T allele (Cys) occurring twice as often in controls compared to epilepsy patients. Contingency analysis documented a statistically significant association between seizure resistance and allele frequency, Mantel-Haenszel chi square = 5.65, d.f. = 1, P = 0.017, odds ratio 0.52, 95% CI 0.33-0.82., Conclusion: The T allele of SNP rs#1130183 is associated with seizure resistance when common forms of focal and generalized epilepsy are analyzed as a group. These data suggest that this missense variation in KCNJ10 (or a nearby variation) is related to general seizure susceptibility in humans.
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- 2004
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18. The early identification of candidates for epilepsy surgery.
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Dlugos DJ
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- Child, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Models, Neurological, Predictive Value of Tests, Sensitivity and Specificity, Syndrome, Treatment Outcome, Epilepsy surgery
- Abstract
The effectiveness of resective surgery for the treatment of carefully selected patients with medically intractable, localization-related epilepsy is clear. Seizure-free rates following temporal lobectomy are consistently 65% to 70% in adults and 68% to 78% in children. Extratemporal resections less commonly lead to a seizure-free outcome, although one recent childhood series reported a seizure-free rate of 62% following extratemporal epilepsy surgery. With both temporal and extratemporal resections, additional patients have a reduction in seizures following surgery but are not completely seizure free. The identification of favorable surgical candidates has been the subject of extensive research, and many investigators have examined predictors of outcome following epilepsy surgery. However, the early identification of the potential epilepsy surgery candidate and the optimal timing of surgery have only occasionally been addressed in the literature. This issue is methodologically challenging to study since studies require large numbers of patients with new-onset partial epilepsy who are followed over time. The purpose of this article is to review the current ability for early prediction of medical intractability in patients with surgically remediable epilepsy. Emphasis will be placed on the early prediction of intractable temporal lobe epilepsy in children and adolescents, since temporal lobectomy remains the prototype epilepsy surgery, and early surgery may improve psychosocial outcome in younger patients.
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- 2001
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19. An EEG should not be obtained routinely after first unprovoked seizure in childhood.
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Dlugos DJ
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- Child, Humans, Brain physiopathology, Electroencephalography, Seizures physiopathology
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- 2000
20. Propagation of neocortical extratemporal seizures.
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Dlugos DJ and Sperling MR
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- Brain physiopathology, Humans, Epilepsy physiopathology, Neocortex physiopathology
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- 2000
21. A 4-year-old with pica, progressive incoordination, and decreased responsiveness.
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Dlugos DJ and Brooks-Kayal AR
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- Brain pathology, Child, Preschool, Chronic Disease, Disease Progression, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Measles complications, Movement Disorders etiology, Persistent Vegetative State etiology, Pica etiology, Severity of Illness Index, Subacute Sclerosing Panencephalitis complications, Subacute Sclerosing Panencephalitis virology, Movement Disorders diagnosis, Persistent Vegetative State diagnosis, Pica diagnosis, Subacute Sclerosing Panencephalitis diagnosis
- Abstract
This article reports a typical case of subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE). The patient contracted measles as an infant during the 1989 to 1991 United States measles epidemic. At 4 1/2 years of age, he developed behavioral changes and quickly progressed through the typical clinical stages of SSPE. His EEG was characteristic. Serum and CSF measles immunoglobulin G were markedly elevated. He remains alive but is vegetative. To our knowledge, this is the first case of SSPE stemming from the 1989 to 1991 measles epidemic. Because infants--the group at highest risk to develop SSPE--were most severely affected by this measles outbreak, other cases of SSPE stemming from this epidemic may occur.
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- 1999
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22. Language-related cognitive declines after left temporal lobectomy in children.
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Dlugos DJ, Moss EM, Duhaime AC, and Brooks-Kayal AR
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- Adolescent, Child, Cognition Disorders diagnosis, Cognition Disorders psychology, Dominance, Cerebral, Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe psychology, Female, Humans, Male, Memory, Neuropsychological Tests, Treatment Outcome, Cognition Disorders etiology, Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe surgery, Language, Neurosurgical Procedures adverse effects, Temporal Lobe surgery, Verbal Learning
- Abstract
Presented is a case series demonstrating that clinically significant language-related cognitive declines not detected by intelligence quotient (IQ) testing occur after left temporal lobectomy in school-aged children. In this series, comprehensive preoperative and postoperative neuropsychologic evaluations were completed in eight school-aged patients who underwent temporal lobectomy (five left, three right) for temporal lobe epilepsy. Mean age at surgery was 13 years, 11 months +/- 2 years, 1 month. Testing included measurement of IQ, verbal learning, naming, visual memory, sight word recognition, reading comprehension, and calculation. All five left temporal lobectomy patients demonstrated significant language-related cognitive declines on postoperative neuropsychologic testing, including deficits in verbal IQ (one patient), verbal learning (four patients), naming (one patient), and reading comprehension (one patient). These deficits were clinically evident in four of the five left temporal lobectomy patients, leading to declines in educational performance. IQ testing alone did not reliably identify these deficits. No significant declines were found after surgery in three right temporal lobectomy patients. Average or high preoperative functioning may have predisposed patients to postoperative deficits in this series, whereas magnetic resonance imaging or pathologic abnormalities did not protect against postoperative deficits. Outcome studies of temporal lobectomy in childhood should use comprehensive neuropsychologic testing to identify cognitive deficits.
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- 1999
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23. Hippocampal cell density and subcortical metabolism in temporal lobe epilepsy.
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Dlugos DJ, Jaggi J, O'Connor WM, Ding XS, Reivich M, O'Connor MJ, and Sperling MR
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- Amygdala diagnostic imaging, Amygdala metabolism, Brain diagnostic imaging, Caudate Nucleus diagnostic imaging, Caudate Nucleus metabolism, Cell Count, Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe metabolism, Fluorodeoxyglucose F18, Globus Pallidus diagnostic imaging, Globus Pallidus metabolism, Hippocampus diagnostic imaging, Hippocampus metabolism, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Putamen diagnostic imaging, Putamen metabolism, Regression Analysis, Tomography, Emission-Computed, Brain metabolism, Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe diagnostic imaging, Glucose metabolism, Hippocampus cytology
- Abstract
Purpose: Correlations between hippocampal cell density and subcortical metabolism in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) were studied to explore possible links between subcortical function and the regulation of hippocampal excitability., Methods: Resected hippocampal cell densities were correlated with cortical and subcortical regional cerebral metabolic rate for glucose (CMRglu), as measured by [18F]-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (18-FDG-PET), in 39 patients with intractable TLE who underwent anterior temporal lobectomy (ATL). CMRglu was measured ipsilateral and contralateral to the resected temporal lobe. Linear regression techniques were used for statistical analysis., Results: Hilar cell densities correlated positively and significantly with CMRglu in the bilateral thalamus, putamen and globus pallidus, and the ipsilateral caudate. Dentate granule cell densities correlated positively and significantly with CMRglu in the bilateral thalamus and putamen. There was no significant correlation between cell densities and CMRglu in any cortical region, including the hippocampus., Conclusions: We postulate that hippocampal cell loss results in decreased efferent synaptic activity to the thalamus and basal ganglia, causing decreased neuronal activity in these structures with consequent hypometabolism. This synaptic activity has a significant bilateral component. Subcortical hypometabolism in patients with TLE may reinforce the epileptogenic potential of mesial temporal lobe discharges.
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- 1999
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24. Effects of the submarine environment on renal-stone risk factors and vitamin D metabolism.
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Dlugos DJ, Perrotta PL, and Horn WG
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- Adult, Creatinine urine, Humans, Kidney Calculi blood, Male, Parathyroid Hormone blood, Phosphorus urine, Risk Factors, Sodium urine, Sulfates urine, Vitamin D blood, Diving adverse effects, Kidney Calculi urine
- Abstract
The effects of total sunlight deprivation on urinary risk factors for nephrolithiasis and vitamin D metabolism were studied in 20 healthy male subjects. Blood and 24-h urine samples were collected before submarine deployment and 68 days later while still at sea. No subject received sunlight exposure during the test interval. Significant decreases in daily urinary excretion of calcium, uric acid, sodium, sulfate, and phosphorus were found. The relative supersaturation ratio of monosodium urate also fell. There was no change in urinary citrate or urine volume. Mean serum levels of 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D] declined from 31 to 19 pg/ml (P < 0.0001), parathyroid hormone increased from 22 to 30 pg/ml (P < 0.0001), and osteocalcin (GLA) increased from 2.7 to 3.3 ng/ml (P = 0.005). Mean serum levels of 1,25 dihydroxy-vitamin D were unchanged. Four subjects had 25(OH)D levels below 10 ng/ml by the end of the submarine patrol. These findings suggest that exposure to the submarine environment produces physiologic changes that decrease the risk for renal stone formation. The data are consistent with the role of vitamin D metabolism in sunlight deprivation and demonstrate that compensatory mechanisms are well established within 68 days.
- Published
- 1995
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