100 results on '"Gollwitzer S"'
Search Results
2. Consonant-to-Vowel/Vowel-to-Consonant Transitions to Analyze the Speech of Cochlear Implant Users
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Arias-Vergara, T., Orozco-Arroyave, J. R., Gollwitzer, S., Schuster, M., Nöth, E., Goos, Gerhard, Founding Editor, Hartmanis, Juris, Founding Editor, Bertino, Elisa, Editorial Board Member, Gao, Wen, Editorial Board Member, Steffen, Bernhard, Editorial Board Member, Woeginger, Gerhard, Editorial Board Member, Yung, Moti, Editorial Board Member, and Ekštein, Kamil, editor
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- 2019
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3. Consonant-to-Vowel/Vowel-to-Consonant Transitions to Analyze the Speech of Cochlear Implant Users
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Arias-Vergara, T., primary, Orozco-Arroyave, J. R., additional, Gollwitzer, S., additional, Schuster, M., additional, and Nöth, E., additional
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- 2019
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4. Early prediction of delayed cerebral ischemia in subarachnoid hemorrhage based on quantitative EEG: A prospective study in adults
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Gollwitzer, S., Groemer, T., Rampp, S., Hagge, M., Olmes, D., Huttner, H.B., Schwab, S., Madžar, D., Hopfengaertner, R., and Hamer, H.M.
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- 2015
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5. A New Model for Inter-Fibre-Failure of High Strength Uni-Directionally Reinforced Plastics and its Reliability Implications
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Rackwitz, R., Gollwitzer, S., and Frantziskonis, George N., editor
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- 1998
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6. Periprothetische femorale Knochenreaktion nach schenkelhalserhaltender Hüftendoprothetik: CT-gestützte Osteodensitometrie 1 und 3 Jahre postoperativ
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Schmidt, R., Gollwitzer, S., Nowak, T.E., Nowak, M., Häberle, L., Kress, A., Forst, R., and Müller, L.A.
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- 2011
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7. Hippocampal neurons code individual episodic memories in humans
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Kolibius, L. D., primary, Roux, F., additional, Parish, G., additional, Ter Wal, M., additional, Van Der Plas, M., additional, Chelvarajah, R., additional, Sawlani, V., additional, Rollings, D. T., additional, Lang, J., additional, Gollwitzer, S., additional, Walther, K., additional, Hopfengärtner, R., additional, Kreiselmeyer, G., additional, Hamer, H., additional, Staresina, B. P., additional, Wimber, M., additional, Bowman, H., additional, and Hanslmayr, S., additional
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- 2021
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8. PERMAS-RA/STRUREL system of programs for probabilistic reliability analysis
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Gollwitzer, S., Kirchgäßner, B., Fischer, R., and Rackwitz, R.
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- 2006
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9. Phone-Attribute Posteriors to Evaluate the Speech of Cochlear Implant Users
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Arias-Vergara, T., primary, Orozco-Arroyave, Juan Rafael, additional, Cernak, Milos, additional, Gollwitzer, S., additional, Schuster, M., additional, and Nöth, Elmar, additional
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- 2019
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10. Speech differences between CI users with pre- and postlingual onset of deafness detected by speech processing methods on voiceless to voice transitions
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Arias Vergara, T, additional, Gollwitzer, S, additional, Orozco-Arroyave, JR, additional, Vasquez-Correa, JC, additional, Nöth, E, additional, Högerle, C, additional, and Schuster, M, additional
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- 2019
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11. The relationship between speech intelligibility and speech perception in cochlear implant patients
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Freimann, N, additional, Polterauer, D, additional, Gollwitzer, S, additional, Müller, J, additional, and Schuster, ME, additional
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- 2018
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12. Zusammenhang zwischen Sprachproduktion und Sprachperzeption bei erwachsenen Cochlea Implantat-Trägern
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Freimann, N, additional, Polterauer, D, additional, Gollwitzer, S, additional, Müller, J, additional, and Schuster, ME, additional
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- 2018
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13. Integration of Multinormal Densities on Surfaces
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Schall, G., Gollwitzer, S., Rackwitz, R., Brebbia, C. A., editor, Orszag, S. A., editor, Argyris, J., editor, Bathe, K.-J., editor, Cakmak, A. S., editor, Connor, J., editor, McCrory, R., editor, Desai, C. S., editor, Holz, K.-P., editor, Leckie, F. A., editor, Pinder, G., editor, Pont, A. R. S., editor, Seinfeld, J. H., editor, Silvester, P., editor, Spanos, P., editor, Wunderlich, W., editor, Yip, S., editor, and Thoft-Christensen, P., editor
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- 1989
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14. Comparison of Numerical Schemes for the Multinormal Integral
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Gollwitzer, S., Rackwitz, R., Brebbia, C. A., editor, Orszag, S. A., editor, Argyris, J., editor, Bathe, K.-J., editor, Cakmak, A. S., editor, Connor, J., editor, McCrory, R., editor, Desai, C. S., editor, Holz, K.-P., editor, Leckie, F. A., editor, Pinder, G., editor, Pont, A. R. S., editor, Seinfeld, J. H., editor, Silvester, P., editor, Spanos, P., editor, Wunderlich, W., editor, Yip, S., editor, and Thoft-Christensen, P., editor
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- 1987
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15. V27. Distribution of epileptogenicity in focal cortical dysplasias assessed with combined grid and depth electrode sampling
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Gollwitzer, S., primary, Valente, I., additional, Rodionov, R., additional, Ritter, L. Mantoan, additional, Wehner, T., additional, Hamer, H., additional, Bartolomei, F., additional, and Diehl, B., additional
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- 2015
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16. Computertomographisch gestützte Knochendichtemessungen sowie klinische Ergebnisse nach C.F.P. Schaft - und T.O.P. Pfannen - Implantation - 3 Jahres follow-up
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Schmidt, R, Gollwitzer, S, Scharrer, M, Forst, R, and Müller, LA
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ddc: 610 - Published
- 2006
17. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy
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Hamer, H. M., primary and Gollwitzer, S., additional
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- 2014
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18. Automatische Detektion von HFO im invasiven EEG
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Schönherr, M, primary, Hamer, H, additional, Madzar, D, additional, Gollwitzer, S, additional, Hopfengärtner, R, additional, Stefan, H, additional, and Rampp, S, additional
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- 2013
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19. Budget Institutions and Fiscal Performance in Africa
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Gollwitzer, S., primary
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- 2010
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20. OSCE in der Neurologie
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Heckmann, J., primary, Knossalla, F., additional, Gollwitzer, S., additional, Lang, C., additional, and Schwab, S., additional
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- 2008
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21. Continuum Sensitivity Method for Reliability-Based Structural Design and Optimization*
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Santos, J. L. T., primary, Siemaszko, A., additional, Gollwitzer, S., additional, and Rackwitz, R., additional
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- 1995
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22. IMPLEMENTATION PROBLEMS OF COMPUTER-BASED PLANNING MODELS IN HORTICULTURAL FIRMS
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Gollwitzer, S., primary
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- 1991
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23. On the reliability of Daniels systems
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Gollwitzer, S., primary and Rackwitz, R., additional
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- 1990
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24. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy
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Gollwitzer, S. and Hamer, H. M.
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- 2014
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25. Continuum Sensitivity Method for Reliability-Based Structural Design and Optimization*
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Santos, J. L. T., Siemaszko, A., Gollwitzer, S., and Rackwitz, R.
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The computational cost of reliability analysis and optimization of medium/large structural systems is prohibitively high. One of the reasons for this situation is the use of inefficient methods, such as finite differences, for design sensitivity analysis. A significant increase in the efficiency of reliability computations is expected from the integration of reliability methods with the discrete and continuum methods of design sensitivity analysis. So far, only the discrete method has been used in the so-called stochastic finite element method. Integration of reliability computations with the continuum method of design sensitivity analysis is proposed in this paper as a new, powerful approach to the probabilistic design of large structural systems.Basic formulations and solution methods of reliability analysis, design sensitivity analysis of reliability indices, reliability-based optimization, and multiobjective reliability-based optimization are reviewed with focus on the sensitivity information necessary to carry out the reliability computations. The most time-consuming sensitivity computations, related to the dependence of structural performance measures on design parameters, are proposed to be performed using the continuum method of design sensitivity analysis. Efficiency of the methodology is demonstrated on an example of reliability-based optimization of a hydraulic shear machine. Sine the approach allows the integration of already existing CADICAE computational resources with state-of-the-art design sensitivity and reliability techniques, it has the potential to become a fundamental strategy for reliability-based design and optimization of large structural systems.
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- 1995
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26. Discussion to: X. Chen and N.C. Lind, “fast probability integration by three-parameter normal tail approximation”, structural safety, 1 (4) (1983) 269–276
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Rackwitz, R., primary and Gollwitzer, S., additional
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- 1984
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27. New light on first- and second-order reliability methods
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Hohenbichler, M., primary, Gollwitzer, S., additional, Kruse, W., additional, and Rackwitz, R., additional
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- 1987
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28. IMPLEMENTATION PROBLEMS OF COMPUTER-BASED PLANNING MODELS IN HORTICULTURAL FIRMS
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Gollwitzer, S., primary
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- 1989
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29. An efficient numerical solution to the multinormal integral
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Gollwitzer, S., primary and Rackwitz, R., additional
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- 1988
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30. SUMMARY OF DISCUSSION GROUP: PRODUCTION PLANNING
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Challa, H., primary, Hack, G.R., additional, and Gollwitzer, S., additional
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- 1989
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31. Equivalent components in first-order system reliability
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Gollwitzer, S., primary and Rackwitz, R., additional
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- 1983
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32. Object naming after epilepsy surgery in the dominant left temporal lobe: risk factors, time course and long-term outcome.
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Walther K, Reindl C, Schwarz M, Gollwitzer S, Kasper BS, Lang JD, Stritzelberger J, Brandner S, Rössler K, Zhao Y, Dörfler A, and Hamer HM
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Background: Deterioration in naming function is a common sequelae after epilepsy surgery in the language-dominant temporal lobe but information on recovery and long-term outcome is scarce. We, therefore, assessed short-term and long-term outcome of object naming in patients undergoing surgery in the temporal lobe and determined factors affecting deterioration and recovery of naming function., Method: Object naming (Boston naming test) before surgery, at early follow-up (FU, 6-12 months) and late FU (≥2 years) was assessed in people with epilepsy (PWE) undergoing resections in the language-dominant left and non-dominant right temporal lobe., Results: Sixty-six patients with left temporal lobe epilepsy (LTLE) and 87 control patients with right temporal lobe epilepsy (RLTE) were included. At early FU, 28 patients with LTLE (42%) and three patients with RTLE (3%) showed a significant naming decline. In patients with LTLE, risk for deterioration increased with lower verbal memory before surgery, older age at seizure onset and was particularly high with posterior temporal resections (≥40 mm from the temporal pole) and seizure onset >16 years. Of the patients with LTLE with early naming decline, 11 patients (39%) recovered fully in their naming abilities at late FU, averaging almost 10 years. Recovery was associated with the degree of postoperative naming decline at early FU. PWE with a decline of less than 10 items (<20%) had a good prognosis of recovery at late FU. Postoperative seizure control had no significant effect on recovery., Conclusions: In our cohort, less than 50% of PWE showed significantly deteriorated naming function after resection of the dominant temporal lobe. If a decline occurred, it appeared to recover to a certain degree and remained as a permanent deficit in 26% of the patients. Long-term outcome of visual object naming can be predicted by the degree of early postoperative decline., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ Group.)
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- 2024
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33. Spectral properties of bursts in therapeutic burst suppression predict successful treatment of refractory status epilepticus.
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Gollwitzer S, Hopfengärtner R, Rampp S, Welte T, Madžar D, Lang J, Reindl C, Stritzelberger J, Koehn J, Kuramatsu J, Schwab S, Huttner HB, and Hamer H
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Adult, Aged, Treatment Outcome, Brain Waves physiology, Brain Waves drug effects, Anesthesia, Intravenous methods, Status Epilepticus physiopathology, Status Epilepticus drug therapy, Electroencephalography methods, Drug Resistant Epilepsy physiopathology, Drug Resistant Epilepsy drug therapy
- Abstract
Burst suppression (BS) on EEG induced by intravenous anesthesia (IVAT) is standard therapy for refractory status epilepticus (RSE). If BS has any independent therapeutic effect on RSE is disputed. We aimed to define EEG characteristics of BS predicting termination or recurrence of status after weaning. All RSE patients treated with IVAT while undergoing continuous EEG monitoring on the neurological intensive care unit between 2014 and 2019 were screened for inclusion. A one hour-period of visually preselected BS-EEG was analyzed. Bursts were segmented by a special thresholding technique and underwent power spectral analysis. Out of 48 enrolled patients, 25 (52.1 %) did not develop seizure recurrence (group Non SE) after weaning from IVAT; in 23 patients (47.9 %), SE reestablished (group SE). In group Non SE, bursts contained higher amounts of EEG delta power (91.59 % vs 80.53 %, p < 0.0001), while faster frequencies were more pronounced in bursts in group SE (theta: 11.38 % vs 5.41 %, p = 0.0008; alpha: 4.89 % vs 1.82 %, p < 0.0001; beta: 3.23 % vs 1.21 %, p = 0.0002). Spectral profiles of individual bursts closely resembled preceding seizure patterns in group SE but not in group Non SE. Accordingly, persistence of spectral composition of initial ictal patterns in bursts, suggests ongoing SE, merely interrupted but not altered by BS. Fast oscillations in bursts indicate a high risk of status recurrence after weaning from IVAT. EEG guided individualized sedation regimes might therefore be superior to standardized anesthesia protocols., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: [S. Gollwitzer received personal fees from Desitin, UCB, outside the submitted work. J.D. Lang served on the speakers’ bureau of Eisai and Destin. H.M. Hamer has served on the scientific advisory boards of Arvelle, Bial, Corlieve, Eisai, GW, Novartis, Sandoz, UCB Pharma and Zogenix. He has served on the speakers’ bureaus of or received unrestricted grants from Amgen, Ad-Tech, Alnylam, Bracco, Desitin, Eisai, GW, Nihon Kohden, Novartis, Pfizer, and UCB Pharma. The remaining authors have no conflicts of interest]., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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34. Evaluation of simplified wireless EEG recordings in the neurological emergency room.
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Welte TM, Janner F, Lindner S, Gollwitzer S, Stritzelberger J, Lang JD, Reindl C, Sprügel MI, Olmes D, Schwab S, Blinzler C, and Hamer HM
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- Humans, Female, Male, Middle Aged, Adult, Aged, Seizures diagnosis, Seizures physiopathology, Wireless Technology instrumentation, Epilepsy diagnosis, Epilepsy physiopathology, Electrodes, Young Adult, Aged, 80 and over, Electroencephalography methods, Electroencephalography instrumentation, Emergency Service, Hospital
- Abstract
Objective: In the neurological emergency room (nER), timely electroencephalography (EEG) diagnostic is often crucial in patients with altered state of consciousness as well as in patients presenting with a first seizure. Yet, routine-EEG (rEEG) is often not available, especially during off-hours., Methods: We analyzed the value of a commercially available, simplified wireless eight-channel EEG recording (swEEG, CerebAir® EEG headset, Nihon Kohden), applied by non-EEG-specialized medical students, in patients presenting in our nER with (suspicion of) epileptic seizures and/or loss of or altered state of consciousness between 08/2019 and 08/2022. We evaluated the feasibility and validity compared to a standard rEEG (21 electrodes according to the international 10/20 system) and also included the clinical follow-up of the patients., Results: 100 patients were included in our analysis (mean age 57.6 ± 20.4 years; 61 male). Median time of electrode application was 7 minutes (range 4-20 minutes), with significantly longer duration in patients with altered level of consciousness (median 8 minutes, p = 0.035). Electrode impedances also differed according to state of consciousness (p = 0.032), and were higher in females (p<0.001). 55 patients received additional rEEG, either during their acute nER stay (25) and/or during the next days (38). Considering normal EEG findings vs. pathological slowing vs. epileptiform activity, swEEG matched first rEEG results in 48/55 cases (87.3%). Overall, swEEG detected the same or additional pathological EEG patterns in 52/55 cases (94.5%). In 7/75 patients (9.3%) who did not receive rEEG, or had their rEEG scheduled to a later time point during their hospital stay, swEEG revealed important additional pathological findings (e.g. status epilepticus, interictal epileptiform discharges), which would have triggered acute therapeutic consequences or led to further diagnostics and investigations., Conclusion: The introduced swEEG represents a practicable, valuable technique to be quickly applied by non-EEG-specialized ER staff to initiate timely diagnostic and guide further investigations and treatment in the nER. Moreover, it may help to avoid under-diagnostic with potentially harmful consequences caused by skipped or postponed regular 10/20 EEG examinations, and ultimately improve the outcome of patients., Competing Interests: “S. Gollwitzer received personal fees from Desitin, UCB, outside the submitted work. J.D. Lang served on the speakers’ bureau of Eisai and Destin. M.I. Sprügel reports grants from IZKF, Marohn Foundation, Doktor Robert Pfleger Foundation and German Society for Neurointensive Care and Emergency Medicine (DGNI) outside submitted work. H.M. Hamer has served on the scientific advisory boards of Arvelle, Bial, Corlieve, Eisai, GW, Novartis, Sandoz, UCB Pharma and Zogenix. He has served on the speakers’ bureaus of or received unrestricted grants from Amgen, Ad-Tech, Alnylam, Bracco, Desitin, Eisai, GW, Nihon Kohden, Novartis, Pfizer, and UCB Pharma. The remaining authors have no conflicts of interest. This does not alter our adherence to PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials”., (Copyright: © 2024 Welte et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
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- 2024
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35. A multicenter randomized controlled feasibility trial of a digital self-management intervention for adults with epilepsy.
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Michaelis R, Knake S, Rosenow F, Grönheit W, Hamer H, Schmitz B, Accarie A, Dedeken P, Immisch I, Habermehl L, Zöllner JP, Mann C, Wehner T, Wellmer J, Cuny J, Gollwitzer S, Losch F, Krämer K, Voss KS, Heinen G, and Strzelczyk A
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- Humans, Female, Male, Adult, Middle Aged, Smartphone, Young Adult, Mobile Applications, Treatment Outcome, Epilepsy therapy, Self-Management methods, Feasibility Studies, Quality of Life
- Abstract
Objective: Self-management interventions may enhance health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in epilepsy. However, several barriers often impair their implementation in the real world. Digital interventions may help to overcome some of these barriers. Considering this, the Helpilepsy Plus Prototype was developed as a prototype smartphone-delivered self-care treatment program for adults with epilepsy., Methods: The 12-week Helpilepsy Plus Prototype was evaluated through a randomized controlled feasibility trial with a waiting-list control (WLC) group. Outcome measurement at baseline and at 12 weeks assessed adherence to the prototype intervention and changes in epilepsy-related outcomes. The primary endpoint was patient autonomy measured with EASE, and secondary endpoints included HRQoL measured with QOLIE-31, health literacy measured with HLQ, anxiety, and depression symptoms measured with HADS. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with a heterogeneous sample of participants to assess user-friendliness and usefulness. The prototype program was delivered through the Neuroventis Platform (Neuroventis, BV, Overijse, Belgium), a certified medical device (under EU/MDD Class I, and EU/MDR grace period)., Results: Ninety-two patients were included (46 in the intervention group, 46 in WLC). Most participants (63%, 58/92 women, median age 30 years) had pharmacoresistant epilepsy (61%, 56/92). Only 22% of participants (10/46) in the intervention group completed at least half of all intervention sessions. No significant differences between the intervention group and WLC were observed. Although there was a larger proportion of patients in the intervention group with meaningful improvements in HRQoL compared to WLC (19/46 versus 11/46), the difference was not significant (p = 0.119). Qualitative feedback showed that participants would appreciate more personalization, such as adaptation of the content to their current epilepsy knowledge level, a more interactive interface, shorter text sections, and interaction through reminders and notifications., Significance: Digital interventions should allow sufficient scope for personalization and interaction to increase patient engagement and enable benefits from self-care apps. Feedback loops allow the participatory development of tailored interventions., Plain Language Summary: In this study, we investigated the effectiveness of an app-based self-help intervention. Study participants were either randomly assigned to a group that had access to the app or a group that received access to the app after the end of the study. Although a larger proportion of participants in the intervention group showed a relevant improvement in quality of life, the difference between the two groups was not statistically significant. Less than one-fifth of participants in the intervention group attended at least half of all intervention sessions; patient feedback showed that patients required more personalization and interactive options., (© 2024 The Authors. Epilepsia Open published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International League Against Epilepsy.)
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- 2024
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36. Hippocampal neurons code individual episodic memories in humans.
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Kolibius LD, Roux F, Parish G, Ter Wal M, Van Der Plas M, Chelvarajah R, Sawlani V, Rollings DT, Lang JD, Gollwitzer S, Walther K, Hopfengärtner R, Kreiselmeyer G, Hamer H, Staresina BP, Wimber M, Bowman H, and Hanslmayr S
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- Humans, Hippocampus physiology, Neurons physiology, Memory, Episodic
- Abstract
The hippocampus is an essential hub for episodic memory processing. However, how human hippocampal single neurons code multi-element associations remains unknown. In particular, it is debated whether each hippocampal neuron represents an invariant element within an episode or whether single neurons bind together all the elements of a discrete episodic memory. Here we provide evidence for the latter hypothesis. Using single-neuron recordings from a total of 30 participants, we show that individual neurons, which we term episode-specific neurons, code discrete episodic memories using either a rate code or a temporal firing code. These neurons were observed exclusively in the hippocampus. Importantly, these episode-specific neurons do not reflect the coding of a particular element in the episode (that is, concept or time). Instead, they code for the conjunction of the different elements that make up the episode., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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37. Tracking cell turnover in human brain using 15 N-thymidine imaging mass spectrometry.
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Roeder SS, Bonnin EA, Wu TD, Guerquin-Kern JL, Jabari S, Brandner S, Eyüpoglu IY, Gollwitzer S, Hamer HM, Gerner ST, Doeppner TR, Rummel C, Englund E, Heimke-Brinck R, Borst T, Daniel C, Amann K, Schlötzer-Schrehardt U, Tonchev AB, Roessler K, Schwab S, Bergmann O, Rizzoli SO, and Huttner HB
- Abstract
Microcephaly is often caused by an impairment of the generation of neurons in the brain, a process referred to as neurogenesis. While most neurogenesis in mammals occurs during brain development, it thought to continue to take place through adulthood in selected regions of the mammalian brain, notably the hippocampus. However, the generality of neurogenesis in the adult brain has been controversial. While studies in mice and rats have provided compelling evidence for neurogenesis occurring in the adult rodent hippocampus, the lack of applicability in humans of key methods to demonstrate neurogenesis has led to an intense debate about the existence and, in particular, the magnitude of neurogenesis in the adult human brain. Here, we demonstrate the applicability of a powerful method to address this debate, that is, the in vivo labeling of adult human patients with
15 N-thymidine, a non-hazardous form of thymidine, an approach without any clinical harm or ethical concerns.15 N-thymidine incorporation into newly synthesized DNA of specific cells was quantified at the single-cell level with subcellular resolution by Multiple-isotype imaging mass spectrometry (MIMS) of brain tissue resected for medical reasons. Two adult human patients, a glioblastoma patient and a patient with drug-refractory right temporal lobe epilepsy, were infused for 24 h with15 N-thymidine. Detection of15 N-positive leukocyte nuclei in blood samples from these patients confirmed previous findings by others and demonstrated the appropriateness of this approach to search for the generation of new cells in the adult human brain.15 N-positive neural cells were easily identified in the glioblastoma tissue sample, and the range of the15 N signal suggested that cells that underwent S-phase fully or partially during the 24 h in vivo labeling period, as well as cells generated therefrom, were detected. In contrast, within the hippocampus tissue resected from the epilepsy patient, none of the 2,000 dentate gyrus neurons analyzed was positive for15 N-thymidine uptake, consistent with the notion that the rate of neurogenesis in the adult human hippocampus is rather low. Of note, the likelihood of detecting neurogenesis was reduced because of (i) the low number of cells analyzed, (ii) the fact that hippocampal tissue was explored that may have had reduced neurogenesis due to epilepsy, and (iii) the labeling period of 24 h which may have been too short to capture quiescent neural stem cells. Yet, overall, our approach to enrich NeuN-labeled neuronal nuclei by FACS prior to MIMS analysis provides a promising strategy to quantify even low rates of neurogenesis in the adult human hippocampus after in vivo15 N-thymidine infusion. From a general point of view and regarding future perspectives, the in vivo labeling of humans with15 N-thymidine followed by MIMS analysis of brain tissue constitutes a novel approach to study mitotically active cells and their progeny in the brain, and thus allows a broad spectrum of studies of brain physiology and pathology, including microcephaly., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Roeder, Bonnin, Wu, Guerquin-Kern, Jabari, Brandner, Eyüpoglu, Gollwitzer, Hamer, Gerner, Döppner, Rummel, Englund, Heimke-Brinck, Borst, Daniel, Amann, Schlötzer-Schrehardt, Tonchev, Roessler, Schwab, Bergmann, Rizzoli and Huttner.)- Published
- 2023
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38. Trends in the neurological emergency room, focusing on persons with seizures.
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Welte TM, Ernst S, Stritzelberger J, Gollwitzer S, Lang JD, Reindl C, Sprügel MI, Olmes D, Schwab S, Blinzler C, and Hamer HM
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- Humans, Male, Adult, Middle Aged, Aged, Female, Retrospective Studies, Seizures epidemiology, Seizures therapy, Seizures diagnosis, Emergency Service, Hospital, Headache, Stroke complications, Stroke epidemiology, Stroke therapy, Epilepsy diagnosis
- Abstract
Background and Purpose: Previous studies in neurological emergency rooms (nERs) have reported many non-acute, self-presenting patients, patients with delayed presentation of stroke, and frequent visits of persons with seizures (PWS). The aim of this study was to evaluate trends during the last decade, with special focus on PWS., Methods: We retrospectively analyzed patients who presented to our specialized nER during the course of 5 months in 2017 and 2019, and included information on admission/referral, hospitalization, discharge diagnosis, and diagnostic tests/treatment in the nER., Results: A total of 2791 patients (46.6% male, mean age 57 ± 21 years) were included. The most common diagnoses were cerebrovascular events (26.3%), headache (14.1%), and seizures (10.5%). Most patients presented with symptoms lasting >48 h (41.3%). The PWS group included the largest proportion of patients presenting within 4.5 h of symptom onset (171/293, 58.4%), whereas only 37.1% of stroke patients presented within this time frame (273/735). Self-presentation was the most common admission pathway (31.1%), followed by emergency service referral (30.4%, including the majority of PWS: 197/293, 67.2%). Despite known diagnosis of epilepsy in 49.2%, PWS more often underwent accessory diagnostic testing including cerebral imaging, compared to the overall cohort (accessory diagnostics 93.9% vs. 85.4%; cerebral imaging 70.1% vs. 64.1%). Electroencephalography in the nER was only performed in 20/111 patients (18.0%) with a first seizure. Nearly half of the patients (46.7%) were discharged home after nER work-up, including most self-presenters (632/869, 72.7%) and headache patients (377/393, 88.3%), as well as 37.2% (109/293) of PWS., Conclusion: After 10 years, nER overuse remains a problem. Stroke patients still do not present early enough, whereas PWS, even those with known epilepsy, often seek acute and extensive assessment, indicating gaps in pre-hospital management and possible over-assessment., (© 2023 The Authors. European Journal of Neurology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Academy of Neurology.)
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- 2023
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39. Age of epilepsy onset as modulating factor for naming deficit after epilepsy surgery: a voxel-based lesion-symptom mapping study.
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Reindl C, Walther K, Allgäuer AL, Lang JD, Welte TM, Stritzelberger J, Gollwitzer S, Schwarz M, Trollmann R, Madzar D, Knott M, Doerfler A, Seifert F, Rössler K, Brandner S, Rampp S, Schwab S, and Hamer HM
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- Humans, Infant, Hippocampus, Temporal Lobe, Language, Epilepsy diagnostic imaging, Epilepsy surgery, Neocortex
- Abstract
Age at onset of epilepsy is an important predictor of deterioration in naming ability following epilepsy surgery. In 141 patients with left hemispheric epilepsy and language dominance who received epilepsy surgery at the Epilepsy Centre Erlangen, naming of objects (Boston naming test, BNT) was assessed preoperatively and 6 months postoperatively. Surgical lesions were plotted on postoperative MRI and normalized for statistical analysis using voxel-based lesion-symptom mapping (VBLSM). The correlation between lesion and presence of postoperative naming deterioration was examined varying the considered age range of epilepsy onsets. The VBLSM analysis showed that volumes of cortex areas in the left temporal lobe, which were associated with postoperative decline of naming, increased with each year of later epilepsy onset. In patients with later onset, an increasing left posterior temporobasal area was significantly associated with a postoperative deficit when included in the resection. For late epilepsy onset, the temporomesial expansion also included the left hippocampus. The results underline that early onset of epilepsy is a good prognostic factor for unchanged postoperative naming ability following epilepsy surgery. For later age of epilepsy onset, the extent of the area at risk of postoperative naming deficit at 6 months after surgery included an increasing left temporobasal area which finally also comprised the hippocampus., (© 2023. Springer Nature Limited.)
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- 2023
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40. Surgical hematoma evacuation of cortical intracerebral hemorrhage ≥10 ml reduces risk of subsequent epilepsy by more than 70%: A retrospective monocenter study.
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Welte TM, Steidl J, Stritzelberger J, Gollwitzer S, Lang JD, Reindl C, Rampp S, Maslarova A, Brandner S, Hock S, Muehlen I, Doerfler A, Kuramatsu JB, Schwab S, Huttner HB, Sprügel MI, and Hamer HM
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- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Hematoma etiology, Hematoma surgery, Seizures complications, Treatment Outcome, Cerebral Hemorrhage complications, Cerebral Hemorrhage surgery, Epilepsy surgery, Epilepsy complications
- Abstract
Aim: The aim of this study was to re-evaluate risk factors for post-ICH epilepsy (PICHE) and examine the impact of surgical hematoma evacuation on epilepsy development after ICH., Background and Purpose: Epilepsy is a common complication after intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH). Information on risk factors is still scarce and the role of ICH evacuation remains uncertain., Methods: We retrospectively included patients with spontaneous ICH treated in our hospital in 2006-2019. Patients' medical records were analyzed. In addition, mailed questionnaires and telephone interviews were used to complete the dataset. Uni- and multivariable hazard ratios (HRs) were applied to investigate risk factors for PICHE and the impact of surgical ICH evacuation., Results: Among 587 ICH patients available for analyses, 139 (23.7%) developed PICHE (mean follow-up 1795 ± 1378 days). The median time of epilepsy onset was 7 months after ICH (range 1-132 months). Risk factors associated with PICHE were cortical hemorrhage (multivariable HR 1.65 [95% CI 1.14-2.37]; p = 0.008), ICH volume > 10 ml (multivariable HR 1.91 [95% CI 1.33-2.73]; p < 0.001) and acute symptomatic seizures (multivariable HR 1.81 [95% CI 1.20-2.75]; p = 0.005). Patients with cortical ICH > 10 ml who underwent surgical hematoma evacuation were less likely to develop epilepsy than those with conservative treatment alone (multivariable HR 0.26 [95% CI 0.08-0.84]; p = 0.025)., Conclusions: Post-ICH epilepsy is frequent and predicted by large cortical ICH and acute symptomatic seizures. Hematoma evacuation reduced the risk of PICHE by more than 70% in patients with large cortical ICH. This finding could be considered in the clinical decision making on the acute treatment of ICH., (© 2022 The Authors. European Journal of Neurology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Academy of Neurology.)
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- 2023
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41. Attitudes toward persons with epilepsy as friends: Results of a factorial survey.
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Walther K, Kriwy P, Stritzelberger J, Graf W, Gollwitzer S, Lang JD, Reindl C, Schwab S, Welte TM, and Hamer HM
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- Humans, Male, Female, Young Adult, Adult, Middle Aged, Adolescent, Surveys and Questionnaires, Seizures, Social Behavior, Friends, Epilepsy
- Abstract
Objective: Discrimination against persons with epilepsy (PWEs) may persist. The aim of this study was to examine whether epilepsy is an obstacle to desired friendship., Methods: A factorial survey (vignettes), which is less biased by social desirability, was applied to PWEs, their relatives, and lay persons. The vignettes described a person who was varied by the dimensions of age (younger, same age, older), gender (male, female), disease (healthy, mild epilepsy, severe epilepsy [generalized tonic-clonic seizures], diabetes), origin (German, non-German), contact (phone/internet, activities at home, activities outside), frequency of contacts (weekly, monthly), and distance (around the corner, 10 km away). Respondents rated their willingness to befriend the person on a 10-point Likert scale. Multivariate regression determined the contribution of each dimension on the judgment., Results: Participants were 64 PWEs (age = 37.1 ± 14.0 years), 64 relatives of PWEs (age = 45.1 ± 13.6 years), and 98 controls without contact with PWEs (age = 24.4 ± 10.1 years). Controls were less interested in a friendship with a PWE with mild epilepsy (-3.4%) and even more avoided PWEs with severe epilepsy (-11.7%), whereas in PWEs with tonic-clonic seizures, a mild form of epilepsy was actually conducive to friendship (+7.0%). Controls preferred females (+5.0%) and disliked younger people (-12.3%) and contacts via the internet or telephone (-7.3%). PWEs were also less interested in younger people (-5.8%), and relatives of PWEs had a lower preference for friendships with longer distance (-2.3%)., Significance: PWEs still suffer from a risk of social avoidance, and this becomes more evident with generalized motor seizures., (© 2022 The Authors. Epilepsia published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International League Against Epilepsy.)
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- 2023
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42. WADA test for postoperative memory prediction in left TLE. Is it still useful in the 21st century?
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Bruzsa AK, Walther K, Kasper BS, Gollwitzer S, Hamer H, and Schwarz M
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- Male, Female, Humans, Adult, Memory, Temporal Lobe surgery, Memory Disorders diagnosis, Memory Disorders etiology, Neuropsychological Tests, Functional Laterality, Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe diagnosis, Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe surgery, Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe psychology, Epilepsy surgery
- Abstract
Background: Epilepsy surgery offers an effective treatment to achieve seizure freedom in refractory temporal lobe epilepsy. Since left temporal lobe surgery can be associated with verbal memory deterioration, control of cognitive decline is a main goal of therapy. This study analyzes the prognostic value of intracarotid amobarbital procedure (Wada test) in addition to specific neuropsychological and clinical variables for postoperative memory changes., Method: Between 2013 and 2021 thirty-six patients (18 females, 18 males, mean age 41.0 years) from the Epilepsy Center Erlangen (ECE) with left hemispheric temporal lobe epilepsy underwent neuropsychological assessment preoperatively - including the Wada test - and six months postoperatively. In addition, a group of 92 patients (40 females, 52 males, mean age 36.1 years) with left or right hemispheric focus who underwent Wada test and surgery before 2013 was included as a standardization group. In all patients Wada test was carried out preoperatively to determine language dominance and memory capacity., Results: Postoperative verbal memory scores showed no significant difference from preoperative performance. Preoperative verbal memory performance as well as the hippocampal resection extent is particularly important in predicting postoperative verbal memory change. After left temporal lobe surgery, a significantly higher postoperative functional level was shown for figural memory. Specifically, a good contralateral hemispheric performance level assessed by the Wada test proved to be a compensatory factor for postoperative losses., Conclusion: The Wada test is no longer necessary as a diagnostic tool for a broad group of patients with temporal lobe epilepsy. However, it can be useful for a subgroup of patients with clinical indicators such as nonspecific or incongruent preoperative verbal and figural memory impairments. In this study, Wada test data about the functional level of the contralateral hemisphere specifically allowed estimation of postoperative figural memory changes., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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43. Oscillations support short latency co-firing of neurons during human episodic memory formation.
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Roux F, Parish G, Chelvarajah R, Rollings DT, Sawlani V, Hamer H, Gollwitzer S, Kreiselmeyer G, Ter Wal MJ, Kolibius L, Staresina BP, Wimber M, Self MW, and Hanslmayr S
- Subjects
- Humans, Memory, Episodic
- Abstract
Theta and gamma oscillations in the medial temporal lobe are suggested to play a critical role for human memory formation via establishing synchrony in neural assemblies. Arguably, such synchrony facilitates efficient information transfer between neurons and enhances synaptic plasticity, both of which benefit episodic memory formation. However, to date little evidence exists from humans that would provide direct evidence for such a specific role of theta and gamma oscillations for episodic memory formation. Here, we investigate how oscillations shape the temporal structure of neural firing during memory formation in the medial temporal lobe. We measured neural firing and local field potentials in human epilepsy patients via micro-wire electrode recordings to analyze whether brain oscillations are related to co-incidences of firing between neurons during successful and unsuccessful encoding of episodic memories. The results show that phase-coupling of neurons to faster theta and gamma oscillations correlates with co-firing at short latencies (~20-30 ms) and occurs during successful memory formation. Phase-coupling at slower oscillations in these same frequency bands, in contrast, correlates with longer co-firing latencies and occurs during memory failure. Thus, our findings suggest that neural oscillations play a role for the synchronization of neural firing in the medial temporal lobe during the encoding of episodic memories., Competing Interests: FR, GP, RC, DR, VS, HH, SG, GK, Mt, LK, BS, MW, MS, SH No competing interests declared, (© 2022, Roux et al.)
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- 2022
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44. Antiseizure medication and perceived "fair" cost allocation: A factorial survey among neurologists, persons with epilepsy, their relatives, and a control group.
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Stritzelberger J, Walther K, Olmes D, Gollwitzer S, Graf W, Welte TM, Lang JD, Reindl C, Schwab S, Kriwy P, and Hamer HM
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- Control Groups, Female, Humans, Male, Seizures, Surveys and Questionnaires, Epilepsy drug therapy, Neurologists
- Abstract
Objective: Because resources are limited in modern health care systems, the decision on the allocation of expensive drugs can be supported by a public consent. This study examines how various factors influence subjectively perceived "fair" pricing of antiseizure medication (ASM) among four groups including physicians, persons with epilepsy (PWEs), their relatives, and a control group., Methods: We conducted a factorial survey. Vignettes featured a fictional PWE receiving a fictional ASM. The characteristics of the fictional PWE, ASM, and epilepsy varied. Participants were asked to assess the subjectively appropriate annual cost of ASM treatment per year for each scenario., Results: Fifty-seven PWEs (mean age (SD) 37.7 ± 12.3, 45.6% female), 44 relatives (age 48.4 ± 15.7, 51.1% female), 46 neurologists (age 37.1 ± 9.6, 65.2% female), and 47 persons in the control group (age 31.2 ± 11.2, 68.1% female) completed the questionnaire. The amount of money that respondents were willing to spend for ASM treatment was higher than currently needed in Germany and increased with disease severity among all groups. All groups except for PWEs accepted higher costs of a drug with better seizure control. Physicians and the control group, but not PWEs and their relatives, tended to do so also for minor or no side effects. Physicians reduced the costs for unemployed patients and the control group spent less money for older patients., Significance: ASM effectiveness appears to justify higher costs. However, the control group attributed less money to older PWEs and physicians allocated fewer drug costs to unemployed PWEs., (© 2022 The Authors. Epilepsia published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International League Against Epilepsy.)
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- 2022
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45. Quantitative EEG may predict weaning failure in ventilated patients on the neurological intensive care unit.
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Welte TM, Gabriel M, Hopfengärtner R, Rampp S, Gollwitzer S, Lang JD, Stritzelberger J, Reindl C, Madžar D, Sprügel MI, Huttner HB, Kuramatsu JB, Schwab S, and Hamer HM
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Electroencephalography, Female, Humans, Intensive Care Units, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Respiration, Artificial adverse effects, Ventilator Weaning
- Abstract
Neurocritical patients suffer from a substantial risk of extubation failure. The aim of this prospective study was to analyze if quantitative EEG (qEEG) monitoring is able to predict successful extubation in these patients. We analyzed EEG-monitoring for at least six hours before extubation in patients receiving mechanical ventilation (MV) on our neurological intensive care unit (NICU) between November 2017 and May 2019. Patients were divided in 2 groups: patients with successful extubation (SE) versus patients with complications after MV withdrawal (failed extubation; FE), including reintubation, need for non-invasive ventilation (NIV) or death. Bipolar six channel EEG was applied. Unselected raw EEG signal underwent automated artefact rejection and Short Time Fast Fourier Transformation. The following relative proportions of global EEG spectrum were analyzed: relative beta (RB), alpha (RA), theta (RT), delta (RD) as well as the alpha delta ratio (ADR). Coefficient of variation (CV) was calculated as a measure of fluctuations in the different power bands. Mann-Whitney U test and logistic regression were applied to analyze group differences. 52 patients were included (26 male, mean age 65 ± 17 years, diagnosis: 40% seizures/status epilepticus, 37% ischemia, 13% intracranial hemorrhage, 10% others). Successful extubation was possible in 40 patients (77%), reintubation was necessary in 6 patients (12%), 5 patients (10%) required NIV, one patient died. In contrast to FE patients, SE patients showed more stable EEG power values (lower CV) considering all EEG channels (RB: p < 0.0005; RA: p = 0.045; RT: p = 0.045) with RB as an independent predictor of weaning success in logistic regression (p = 0.004). The proportion of the EEG frequency bands (RB, RA RT, RD) of the entire EEG power spectrum was not significantly different between SE and FE patients. Higher fluctuations in qEEG frequency bands, reflecting greater fluctuation in alertness, during the hours before cessation of MV were associated with a higher rate of complications after extubation in this cohort. The stability of qEEG power values may represent a non-invasive, examiner-independent parameter to facilitate weaning assessment in neurocritical patients., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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46. Psychogenic nonepileptic seizures: clinical characteristics and outcome.
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Volbers B, Walther K, Kurzbuch K, Erdmann L, Gollwitzer S, Lang JD, Dogan Onugoren M, Schwarz M, Schwab S, and Hamer HM
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- Adult, Aged, Electroencephalography, Female, Humans, Male, Psychogenic Nonepileptic Seizures, Quality of Life psychology, Retrospective Studies, Epilepsy psychology, Seizures diagnosis, Seizures epidemiology, Seizures psychology
- Abstract
Background: Clinical characteristics, outpatient situation, and outcome in patients with psychogenic nonepileptic seizures (PNES) remain to be elucidated., Methods: Patients diagnosed with PNES after video-electroencephalography (EEG) monitoring (VEM) 03/2000-01/2016 at the Erlangen Epilepsy Center were surveyed between June 2016 and February 2017. Primary outcome was PNES cessation defined as no PNES episodes within > = 12 months prior to the interview. Secondary outcome variables included quality of life (QoL) and dependency. Sensitivity analysis included patients with proven PNES during VEM without comorbid epilepsy., Results: Ninety-nine patients were included (median age 38 (interquartile range (IQR 29-52)) years; 68 (69%) females, follow-up 4 (IQR 2.1-7.7) years). Twenty-eight (28%) patients suffered from comorbid epilepsy. Twenty-five (25%) patients reported PNES cessation. Older age at symptom onset (odds ratio (OR) related to PNES cessation: 0.95 (95% CI 0.90-0.99)), comorbid epilepsy (OR 0.16 (95% CI 0.03-0.83)), anxiety disorder (OR 0.15 (95% CI 0.04-0.61)), and tongue biting (OR 0.22 (95% CI 0.03-0.91)) remained independently associated with ongoing PNES activity after adjustment. Sensitivity analysis (n = 63) revealed depressive disorder (OR 0.03 (95% CI 0.003-0.34)) instead of anxiety as independent predictor, while this seemed relevant only in patients older than 26 years at onset (OR 0.04 (95% CI 0.002-0.78) versus OR 0.21 (95% CI 0.02-1.84) in patients younger than 26 years). PNES cessation was associated with increased median QoL (8 (IQR 7-9) versus 5.5 (IQR 4-7); p < .001) and an increased frequency of financial independency (14 (56%) versus 21 (28%); p = .01)., Conclusions: We found poor outcomes in PNES especially in older patients at onset with comorbid depressive disorder. Comorbid epilepsy also seems to be a major risk factor of ongoing PNES activity, which in turn affects patients' daily living., (© 2022 The Authors. Brain and Behavior published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2022
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47. Phase-amplitude coupling measures for determination of the epileptic network: A methodological comparison.
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Ali R, Gollwitzer S, Reindl C, Hamer H, Coras R, Blümcke I, Buchfelder M, Hastreiter P, and Rampp S
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- Electroencephalography, Humans, Epilepsy diagnosis
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- 2022
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48. Resection of dominant fusiform gyrus is associated with decline of naming function when temporal lobe epilepsy manifests after the age of five: A voxel-based lesion-symptom mapping study.
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Reindl C, Allgäuer AL, Kleiser BA, Onugoren MD, Lang JD, Welte TM, Stritzelberger J, Winder K, Schwarz M, Gollwitzer S, Trollmann R, Rösch J, Doerfler A, Rössler K, Brandner S, Madžar D, Seifert F, Rampp S, Hamer HM, and Walther K
- Subjects
- Anterior Temporal Lobectomy, Brain Mapping methods, Humans, Neuropsychological Tests, Temporal Lobe diagnostic imaging, Temporal Lobe pathology, Temporal Lobe surgery, Epilepsy, Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe diagnostic imaging, Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe pathology, Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe surgery
- Abstract
Objective: To determine patients' characteristics and regions in the temporal lobe where resections lead to a decline in picture naming., Methods: 311 patients with left hemispheric dominance for language were included who underwent epilepsy surgery at the Epilepsy Center of Erlangen and whose picture naming scores (Boston Naming Test, BNT) were available preoperatively and 6-months postoperatively. Surgical lesions were mapped to an averaged template based on preoperative and postoperative MRI using voxel-based lesion-symptom mapping (VBLSM). Postoperative brain shifts were corrected. The relationship between lesioned brain areas and the presence of a postoperative naming decline was examined voxel-wise while controlling for effects of overall lesion size at first in the total cohort and then restricted to temporal lobe resections., Results: In VBLSM in the total sample, a decline in BNT score was significantly related to left temporal surgery. When only considering patients with left temporal lobe resections (n = 121), 40 (33.1%) significantly worsened in BNT postoperatively. VBLSM including all patients with left temporal resections generated no significant results within the temporal lobe. However, naming decline of patients with epilepsy onset after 5 years of age was significantly associated with resections in the left inferior temporal (extent of BNT decline range: 10.8- 14.4%) and fusiform gyrus (decline range: 12.1-18.4%)., Significance: Resections in the posterior part of the dominant fusiform and inferior temporal gyrus was associated with a risk of deterioration in naming performance at six months after surgery in patients with epilepsy onset after 5 years of age but not with earlier epilepsy onset., (Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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49. Theta rhythmicity governs human behavior and hippocampal signals during memory-dependent tasks.
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Ter Wal M, Linde-Domingo J, Lifanov J, Roux F, Kolibius LD, Gollwitzer S, Lang J, Hamer H, Rollings D, Sawlani V, Chelvarajah R, Staresina B, Hanslmayr S, and Wimber M
- Subjects
- Adult, Cues, Electrocorticography, Female, Healthy Volunteers, Hippocampus anatomy & histology, Hippocampus diagnostic imaging, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Periodicity, Reaction Time physiology, Hippocampus physiology, Mental Recall physiology, Pattern Recognition, Visual physiology, Theta Rhythm physiology
- Abstract
Memory formation and reinstatement are thought to lock to the hippocampal theta rhythm, predicting that encoding and retrieval processes appear rhythmic themselves. Here, we show that rhythmicity can be observed in behavioral responses from memory tasks, where participants indicate, using button presses, the timing of encoding and recall of cue-object associative memories. We find no evidence for rhythmicity in button presses for visual tasks using the same stimuli, or for questions about already retrieved objects. The oscillations for correctly remembered trials center in the slow theta frequency range (1-5 Hz). Using intracranial EEG recordings, we show that the memory task induces temporally extended phase consistency in hippocampal local field potentials at slow theta frequencies, but significantly more for remembered than forgotten trials, providing a potential mechanistic underpinning for the theta oscillations found in behavioral responses., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
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- 2021
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50. Alpha power decrease in quantitative EEG detects development of cerebral infarction after subarachnoid hemorrhage early.
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Mueller TM, Gollwitzer S, Hopfengärtner R, Rampp S, Lang JD, Stritzelberger J, Madžar D, Reindl C, Sprügel MI, Dogan Onugoren M, Muehlen I, Kuramatsu JB, Schwab S, Huttner HB, and Hamer HM
- Subjects
- Aged, Cerebral Infarction physiopathology, Electroencephalography, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Subarachnoid Hemorrhage physiopathology, Alpha Rhythm physiology, Cerebral Cortex physiopathology, Cerebral Infarction etiology, Subarachnoid Hemorrhage complications
- Abstract
Objective: In subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH), transcranial Doppler/color-coded-duplex sonography (TCD/TCCS) is used to detect delayed cerebral ischemia (DCI). In previous studies, quantitative electroencephalography (qEEG) also predicted imminent DCI. This study aimed to compare and analyse the ability of qEEG and TCD/TCCS to early identify patients who will develop later manifest cerebral infarction., Methods: We analysed cohorts of two previous qEEG studies. Continuous six-channel-EEG with artefact rejection and a detrending procedure was applied. Alpha power decline of ≥ 40% for ≥ 5 hours compared to a 6-hour-baseline was defined as significant EEG event. Median reduction and duration of alpha power decrease in each channel was determined. Vasospasm was diagnosed by TCD/TCCS, identifying the maximum frequency and days of vasospasm in each territory., Results: 34 patients were included (17 male, mean age 56 ± 11 years, Hunt and Hess grade: I-V, cerebral infarction: 9). Maximum frequencies in TCD/TCCS and alpha power reduction in qEEG were correlated (r = 0.43; p = 0.015). Patients with and without infarction significantly differed in qEEG parameters (maximum alpha power decrease: 78% vs 64%, p = 0.019; summed hours of alpha power decline: 236 hours vs 39 hours, p = 0.006) but showed no significant differences in TCD/TCCS parameters., Conclusions: There was a moderate correlation of TCD/TCCS frequencies and qEEG alpha power reduction but only qEEG differentiated between patients with and without cerebral infarction., Significance: qEEG represents a non-invasive, continuous tool to identify patients at risk of cerebral infarction., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest Tamara M. Müller, Rüdiger Hopfengärtner, Stephan Rampp, Johannes Lang, Jenny Stritzelberger, Caroline Reindl, Maximilian I. Sprügel, Müjgan Dogan Onugoren, Iris Muehlen, Joji B. Kuramatsu, Stefan Schwab: report no disclosures. Stephanie Gollwitzer reports personal fees from Desitin, Eisai, UCB, outside the submitted work. Dominik Madžar reports grants from UCB Pharma and BayerVitalGmbH, outside submitted work. Hagen B. Huttner reports grants from Novartis, grants and personal fees from Bayer AG, grants and personal fees from Daiichi Sankyo, grants and personal fees from Medtronic, grants and personal fees from Portola Pharmaceuticals, outside the submitted work. Hajo M. Hamer: reports personal fees from UCB, Desitin, Eisai, GW, Novartis, IQWiG, Hexal, facetoface, grants from Amgen, Ad-Tech, Bracco, Pfizer, Micromed, Nihon Kohden, personal fees from Arvelle, outside the submitted work., (Copyright © 2021 International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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