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1101


UTILITY OF BILATERAL SUBDURAL ELECTRODE IMPLANTATION FOLLOWING CORPUS CALLOSOTOMY IN PATIENTS WITH POORLY LOCALIZED, MEDICALLY REFRACTORY EPILEPSY [Meeting Abstract]

Silverberg, A; Menzer, KP; Devinsky, O; Doyle, WK; Carlson, C
ISI:000260306600731
ISSN: 0013-9580
CID: 91396

EPIDURAL AND SUBDURAL MUSCIMOL DELIVERIES IN RATS AND MONKEYS, RESPECTIVELY, PREVENT FOCAL SEIZURES AT CONCENTRATIONS THAT CAUSE NO BEHAVIORAL SIDE-EFFECTS [Meeting Abstract]

Baptiste, SL; Tang, HM; Devinsky, O; Kuzniecky, RI; Charchaflieh, J; von Gizycki, H; Ludvig, N
ISI:000260306600902
ISSN: 0013-9580
CID: 91398

Chapter 21 Visual agnosia

Devinsky, Orrin; Farah, Martha J; Barr, William B
PMID: 18631704
ISSN: 0072-9752
CID: 95084

Temporal lobe epilepsy does not impair visual perception

Grant, Arthur C; Donnelly, Kiely M; Chubb, Charlie; Barr, William B; Kuzniecky, Ruben; Devinsky, Orrin
Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) can impair interictal cognitive function. In the perceptual domain, previous psychophysical studies demonstrated specific deficits in auditory and tactile perception in patients with TLE. This study compared performance of 25 TLE subjects and 27 controls on two low-level, visual tasks: luminance discrimination and frequency discrimination. Both tasks were performed under a relatively easy and a relatively difficult condition, by adjusting the stimulus duration. TLE subjects performed as well as controls on both tasks at both stimulus durations. These results imply that interictal occipital lobe function, as reflected in performance on low-level visual tasks, is not impaired in TLE, consistent with functional imaging data. Furthermore, since TLE subjects performed normally while taking therapeutic doses of multiple AEDs, the data suggest that these AEDs do not impair visual perception
PMID: 18177359
ISSN: 0013-9580
CID: 95086

Postictal psychosis: common, dangerous, and treatable

Devinsky, Orrin
'Occasionally, after a fit, or, more frequently, after a series of fits, an attack of mental disturbance may come on which lasts for several days. It may be simply a demented state, or there may be hallucinations, with irritability and even violence (1).'
PMCID:2265810
PMID: 18330462
ISSN: 1535-7597
CID: 96913

Use of the WAIS-III/WMS-III six factor structure in left and right temporal lobe epilepsy [Meeting Abstract]

Karantzoulis, S; Morrison, CE; Barr, WB; Devinsky, O
ISI:000255690000084
ISSN: 1385-4046
CID: 104240

Worsening of generalized epilepsy with the anti-epileptic drug oxcarbazepine [Meeting Abstract]

Widdess-Walsh, P; Bojko, A; Geller, E; Goldberg, R; Nadkarni, M; Devinsky, O
ISI:000257197200320
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 104239

Frequency and predictors of autism in children with tuberous sclerosis complex [Meeting Abstract]

Zelleke, TZ; Rubin, MR; Cohen, BC; Lai, GL; LaJoie, JL; Miles, DM; Devinsky, OD; Zaroff, CZ; MacAllister, WM; Weiner, HW; Nass, RN
ISI:000258923700383
ISSN: 0364-5134
CID: 104238

Effects of vagus nerve stimulation on cardiovascular regulation in patients with epilepsy

Stemper, B; Devinsky, O; Haendl, T; Welsch, G; Hilz, M J
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the impact of vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) on heart rate and blood pressure (BP) modulation in epilepsy patients. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Twenty-one epilepsy patients with VNS were tested during on (60 s) and off (5 min) phases. We monitored BP, RR intervals (RRI) and respiration. Spectral analysis was performed in low- (LF: 0.04-0.15 Hz) and high-frequency bands (HF: 0.15-0.5 Hz). For coherences above 0.5, we calculated the LF transfer function between systolic BP and RRI, and the HF transfer function gain and phase between RRI and respiration. Differences between the on and off phases were evaluated using Wilcoxon test. RESULTS: VNS did not change RRI and BP values. The LF power of BP and the LF and HF power of RRI increased significantly. There was a slight change in the RRI/BP LF gain and the RRI/respiration HF gain (ns). The HF phase between RRI and respiration decreased significantly. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings show that VNS influences both sympathetic and parasympathetic cardiovascular modulation. However, our results also show that VNS does not negatively influence autonomic cardiovascular regulation
PMID: 18005223
ISSN: 1600-0404
CID: 104796

Personality disorders

Chapter by: Devinsky, Orrin; Vorkas, Charles; Barr, William B; Hermann, Bruce P
in: Epilepsy : a comprehensive textbook by Engel J; Pedley TA [Eds]
Philadelphia PA : Wolters Kluwer/Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2008
pp. ?-?
ISBN: 9780781757775
CID: 5444