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Source: Clinical Neurophysiology
Condition: Epilepsy
Education: Study

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Total 10 results found since Jan 2013.

1. Epileptic seizures in pediatric stroke: Data from the Italian Registry for Childhood Thrombosis
According to data from the Italian Registry for Childhood Thrombosis (R.I.T.I.), in about half cases diagnosis of pediatric stroke occurs after 24h from clinical onset (Baggio et al., SINP2013). The aim of the present study was to evaluate the frequency of seizures at stroke onset and their correlation with time to diagnosis in the pediatric stroke patients in the R.I.T.I. We selected the R.I.T.I. children with first acute arterial (AIS) or venous (CSVT) cerebral infarction occurring between January 2007 and June 2012; we studied prevalence, characteristics and recurrence of epileptic seizures, focusing on diagnostic delay.
Source: Clinical Neurophysiology - December 13, 2014 Category: Neuroscience Authors: L. Baggio, S. Sartori, M. Nosadini, C. Gentilomo, P. Saracco, M. Agostini, B. Bassi, A. Palmieri, A.M. Laverda, P. Simioni, A. Suppiej, per il G.I.R.T.I. (Gruppo Italiano Registro Trombosi Infantili) Source Type: research

P 219. Navigated repeated transcranial magnetic stimulation in stroke rehabilitation (randomized blind sham-controlled study), Preliminary results: safety and tolerability
Conclusion: Repeated nTMS is safe and effective add-method in motor post-stroke rehabilitation, but continuous study and forming protocols are necessary to validate this method.ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01652677.
Source: Clinical Neurophysiology - September 19, 2013 Category: Neuroscience Authors: M. Piradov, L. Chernikova, M. Tanashyan, A. Kadykov, A. Chervyakov, M. Nazarova, V. Gnezditsky, R. Konovalov, N. Savitskaya, P. Fedin, A. Suslin, M. Glebov, L. Dobrynina Tags: Society Proceedings Source Type: research

P 194. The EEG correlates of the TMS induced EMG silent period in humans
Application of magnetic or electrical stimulation to the motor cortex can result in a period of electromyography (EMG) silence in a tonically active peripheral muscle. This period of EMG silence is referred to as the silent period (SP). The duration of SP shows intersubject variability and reflects the integrity of the cortical and corticospinal pathways. A non-invasive technique for assessing the duration of SP is the combination of Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) with EMG. Utilizing TMS-EMG, several studies have reported on the shortening or lengthening of SP in neuropsychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia, b...
Source: Clinical Neurophysiology - September 19, 2013 Category: Neuroscience Authors: F. Farzan, M.S. Barr, S. Hoppenbrouwers, P.B. Fitzgerald, R. Chen, A. Pascual-Leone, Z.J. Daskalakis Tags: Society Proceedings Source Type: research

P 172. Focal tDCS in Chronic Stroke patients: A pilot study of physiological effects using TMS and concurrent EEG
We report results of MEPs, EEG, and motor behavior. We show, for the first time, that tDCS and EEG recording can be concurrently applied in stroke patients. Bilateral M1 stimulation using small Ag/AgCl electrodes is well tolerated and can augment corticospinal excitability in the affected hemisphere. In the literature, there is only one prior studying using concurrent EEG recording during cathodal tDCS in healthy subjects and two patients with epileptic encephalopathy (Faria et al., 2012). As far as we know, no studies have applied tDCS simultaneous with EEG recording in chronic stroke patients. We report the first study i...
Source: Clinical Neurophysiology - September 19, 2013 Category: Neuroscience Authors: D. Boratyn, G. Ruffini, M. Cortes, A. Rykman, A. Medeiros, A. Pascual-Leone, D. Edwards Tags: Society Proceedings Source Type: research

P 162. The effects of direct current stimulation on motor cortex excitability in children and adolescents
Conclusion: Our study will provide new insight into the principles of tDCS stimulation and its therapeutic value in treatment of childhood neurological and psychiatric disorders. This may further refine the effective use of tDCS in pediatric population.
Source: Clinical Neurophysiology - September 19, 2013 Category: Neuroscience Authors: V. Moliadze, T. Schmanke, S. Bassüner, C. Freitag, M. Siniatchkin Tags: Society Proceedings Source Type: research

P 219. Navigated repeated transcranial magnetic stimulation in stroke rehabilitation (randomized blind sham-controlled study), Preliminary results: safety and tolerability
Conclusion: Repeated nTMS is safe and effective add-method in motor post-stroke rehabilitation, but continuous study and forming protocols are necessary to validate this method.ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01652677.
Source: Clinical Neurophysiology - September 1, 2013 Category: Neuroscience Authors: M. Piradov, L. Chernikova, M. Tanashyan, A. Kadykov, A. Chervyakov, M. Nazarova, V. Gnezditsky, R. Konovalov, N. Savitskaya, P. Fedin, A. Suslin, M. Glebov, L. Dobrynina Tags: Society Proceedings Source Type: research

P 194. The EEG correlates of the TMS induced EMG silent period in humans
Application of magnetic or electrical stimulation to the motor cortex can result in a period of electromyography (EMG) silence in a tonically active peripheral muscle. This period of EMG silence is referred to as the silent period (SP). The duration of SP shows intersubject variability and reflects the integrity of the cortical and corticospinal pathways. A non-invasive technique for assessing the duration of SP is the combination of Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) with EMG. Utilizing TMS-EMG, several studies have reported on the shortening or lengthening of SP in neuropsychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia, b...
Source: Clinical Neurophysiology - September 1, 2013 Category: Neuroscience Authors: F. Farzan, M.S. Barr, S. Hoppenbrouwers, P.B. Fitzgerald, R. Chen, A. Pascual-Leone, Z.J. Daskalakis Tags: Society Proceedings Source Type: research

P 162. The effects of direct current stimulation on motor cortex excitability in children and adolescents
Conclusion: Our study will provide new insight into the principles of tDCS stimulation and its therapeutic value in treatment of childhood neurological and psychiatric disorders. This may further refine the effective use of tDCS in pediatric population.
Source: Clinical Neurophysiology - September 1, 2013 Category: Neuroscience Authors: V. Moliadze, T. Schmanke, S. Bassüner, C. Freitag, M. Siniatchkin Tags: Society Proceedings Source Type: research

P 172. Focal tDCS in Chronic Stroke patients: A pilot study of physiological effects using TMS and concurrent EEG
We report results of MEPs, EEG, and motor behavior. We show, for the first time, that tDCS and EEG recording can be concurrently applied in stroke patients. Bilateral M1 stimulation using small Ag/AgCl electrodes is well tolerated and can augment corticospinal excitability in the affected hemisphere. In the literature, there is only one prior studying using concurrent EEG recording during cathodal tDCS in healthy subjects and two patients with epileptic encephalopathy (Faria et al., 2012). As far as we know, no studies have applied tDCS simultaneous with EEG recording in chronic stroke patients. We report the first study i...
Source: Clinical Neurophysiology - September 1, 2013 Category: Neuroscience Authors: D. Boratyn, G. Ruffini, M. Cortes, A. Rykman, A. Medeiros, A. Pascual-Leone, D. Edwards Tags: Society Proceedings Source Type: research

4. ICU EEG study
This study suggests that long-term EEG monitoring in an unselected ICU population rarely influences treatment or outcome. In a selected population with known epilepsy the benefit may be larger.
Source: Clinical Neurophysiology - May 18, 2013 Category: Neuroscience Authors: Omar Khan, Christina Azevedo, Justin Montanye, Juan Gonzalez, Syed Arshad, Mark Natola, Stephen Surgenor, Richard Morse, Richard Nordgren, Krzysztof Bujarski, Gregory Holmes, Barbara Jobst, Vijay Thadani Tags: Society Proceedings Source Type: research