Harumi Yoshinaga

Okayama University, Okayama-shi, Okayama-ken, Japan

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Publications (55)221.46 Total impact

  • Article: Questionnaire-based assessment of behavioral problems in Japanese children with epilepsy.
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    ABSTRACT: Behavioral problems in Japanese children with epilepsy were investigated by means of a questionnaire for parents consisting of three checklists: the Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL)/4-18 Japanese Edition, the High-Functioning Autism Spectrum Screening Questionnaire (ASSQ), and the Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) Rating Scale-IV (ADHD-RS) for parents. The participants were the parents of 108 children aged 6-18years with apparently normal intelligence. The CBCL indicated abnormal behavior in 10.5 to 35.6% of the children, and T scores on both the internalizing and externalizing scales had a significant positive relation with scores on the ASSQ and ADHD-RS. It was revealed through multivariate logistic regression analysis that the persistence of seizures was significantly related with abnormality on the externalizing scale of the CBCL (p=0.010, odds ratio: 3.48, 95% confidence interval: 1.34-9.02). Future studies are needed to determine whether seizure freedom improves behavior in children with epilepsy.
    Epilepsy & Behavior 03/2013; · 2.34 Impact Factor
  • Article: Cortical contribution to scalp EEG gamma rhythms associated with epileptic spasms.
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    ABSTRACT: The cortical contribution for the generation of gamma rhythms detected from scalp ictal EEG was studied in unique cases of epileptic spasms and a review of the related literature was conducted. Ictal scalp gamma rhythms were investigated through time-frequency analysis in two cases with a combination of focal seizures and spasms and another case with spasms associated with cortical dysplasia. In the two patients with combined seizures, the scalp distribution of ictal gamma rhythms was related to that of focal seizure activity. In the third patient, an asymmetric distribution of the ictal scalp gamma rhythms was transiently revealed in correspondence to the dysplasic cortex during hormonal treatment. Therefore, the dominant region of scalp gamma rhythms may correspond to the epileptogenic cortical area. The current findings have reinforced the possibility of the cortical generation of ictal scalp gamma rhythms associated with spasms. The detection of high frequencies through scalp EEG is a technical challenge, however, and the clinical significance of scalp gamma rhythms may not be the same as that of invasively recorded high frequencies. Further studies on the pathophysiological mechanisms related to the generation of spasms involving high frequencies are necessary in the future, and the development of animal models of spasms will play an important role in this regard.
    Brain & development 02/2013; · 1.74 Impact Factor
  • Article: CSF/plasma ratios of amino acids: Reference data and transports in children.
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    ABSTRACT: Objective: We intended to investigate the effects of age, gender, and medications on amino acid cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)/plasma ratios in children, and to determine whether amino acid transports across the blood-CSF barrier in children differ from those in adults. Patients and methods: Amino acid concentrations measured by ion-exchange high-performance liquid chromatography were used (CSF from 99 children, simultaneously collected plasma from 76 children). Influence of age, gender, and medications on the amino acid CSF concentrations and CSF/plasma ratios were analyzed by linear multiple regression. Interactions of amino acid transports were analyzed by correlation analysis of CSF/plasma ratios. Results: CSF/plasma ratios of serine, valine, histidine, and arginine were higher in younger children. The glutamate CSF/plasma ratio was higher in older children. Serine, alanine, threonine, valine, and histidine CSF/plasma ratios were lower in females. Glutamine, methionine, tyrosine, and phenylalanine CSF/plasma ratios were elevated with valproate therapy. Serine, threonine, valine, leucine, and tyrosine CSF/plasma ratios were lower with clobazam therapy. The asparagine CSF/plasma ratio was elevated with pyridoxal phosphate therapy. Transports of most essential neutral amino acids interacted with each other, as did neutral amino acids with low molecular weights. Cationic amino acids interacted with each other and some essential neutral amino acids. Acidic amino acids had no interactions with other amino acids. Conclusions: Age, gender, and anti-epileptic drugs affect amino acid CSF/plasma ratios in children. Transport interactions between amino acids in children showed no remarkable difference from those of adults and generally followed the substrate specificities of multiple amino acid transport systems.
    Brain & development 12/2012; · 1.74 Impact Factor
  • Article: Clinical implications of preceding positive spikes in patients with benign partial epilepsy and febrile seizures.
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    ABSTRACT: Purpose: To clarify the clinical implications of the preceding positive spikes (PPSs) observed primarily in rolandic spikes, we analyzed PPSs in the rolandic and occipital spikes observed in the electroencephalograms (EEGs) of patients with two types of benign partial epilepsies (benign childhood epilepsy with centro-temporal spikes [BECT] and Panayiotopoulos syndrome [PS]) and febrile seizures (FS). Subjects and methods: We identified patients from our outpatient EEG database that were seen between 2006 and 2008 that had BECT, PS, and FS with rolandic or occipital spikes. We generated an averaged spike for each patient from the rolandic and occipital spikes that were detected using an automatic spike detection and clustering system. We compared the presence rate of the averaged spikes with the PPS among the three groups (BECT vs. PS vs. FS) using sequential mapping. Results: We identified 25 BECT, 18 PS, and 15 FS patients with rolandic spikes. Fifteen BECT and nine PS patients exhibited a PPS in their averaged rolandic spikes, whereas only four FS patients did. Three of these four FS patients later developed afebrile seizures, and one of them was diagnosed as having PS. We analyzed eight PS and six FS patients with occipital spikes. Five PS patients exhibited a PPS in their averaged occipital spikes, whereas only one FS patient did. This FS patient later developed prolonged autonomic febrile seizures. Conclusion: PPSs are observed not only in rolandic spikes associated with BECT that is related strictly to sylvian seizures, but also in rolandic and occipital spikes associated with PS. Although PPSs are rare in such spikes observed in FS, patients with FS and PPSs may have an increased risk of developing afebrile seizures or prolonged autonomic febrile seizures. Further studies are warranted to determine the diagnostic utility of PPSs as a marker of the future development of epilepsy when they are observed in FS patients.
    Brain & development 07/2012; · 1.74 Impact Factor
  • Article: Efficacy of topiramate for intractable childhood generalized epilepsy with epileptic spasms: with special reference to electroencephalographic changes.
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    ABSTRACT: Epileptic spasms (ES) beyond infancy are a highly refractory type of seizures that require the development of an effective treatment. We therefore studied the efficacy and safety of topiramate (TPM), which is a drug that is indicated to be effective for intractable childhood epilepsy, for ES. Out of 58 children with ES, we enrolled 33 patients treated with TPM at ≤ 12 years of age. The administration of TPM was limited to cases of epilepsies that were resistant to any other potent treatment. We retrospectively investigated the efficacy of TPM for seizures and changes in electroencephalogram (EEG) findings. The median age at the start of TPM treatment was 5 years, 8 months. All patients had ES and 28 also had tonic seizures. As for the efficacy of TPM for all seizures, five patients became seizure-free and two had a ≥ 50% reduction in seizures. Seizure aggravation was observed in six patients. Of 29 patients whose EEG findings were compared before and during TPM treatment, nine showed EEG improvement with reduced epileptic discharges. Adverse effects were observed in 13 patients and included somnolence, anorexia, and irritability. In general, TPM was well tolerated. TPM can be effective at suppressing very intractable ES in a proportion of patients who do not respond to any other treatment. The efficacy of TPM may be predictable based on EEG changes observed early in the course of treatment. TPM is promising for the treatment of extremely intractable childhood epilepsy and it has largely tolerable adverse effects.
    Seizure 06/2012; 21(7):522-8. · 1.80 Impact Factor
  • Article: Memory enhancement and deep-brain stimulation of the entorhinal area.
    Katsuhiro Kobayashi, Harumi Yoshinaga, Yoko Ohtsuka
    New England Journal of Medicine 05/2012; 366(20):1945; author reply 1946. · 53.30 Impact Factor
  • Article: [Peculiar involuntary movements in premature babies with specific cerebellar injuries].
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    ABSTRACT: We observed characteristic involuntary movements in premature babies during early infancy. These movements consisted of asymmetrical irregular banging of the extremities, similar to chorea, ballisms, or jitteriness. We investigated the clinical characteristics and neuroimaging findings of the patients with these peculiar involuntary movements to clarify their pathophysiological mechanisms and to find a treatment. In our sequential follow-up study on 90 premature infants with various pre-and perinatal brain insults, we found various types of cerebellar injuries in 28 patients. In 19 of these, the prominent injuries were observed in the inferior cerebellar hemispheres. These cerebellar injuries were often observed in patients born before the gestational age of 27 weeks. Fourteen of the 28 patients with cerebellar injuries displayed the above-mentioned characteristic involuntary movements. Twelve of these 14 patients with both cerebellar injury and involuntary movements were born before the gestational age of 27 weeks. On the contrary, 10 patients with cerebellar injury born after the gestational age of 27 weeks did not display these peculiar involuntary movements. It is noteworthy that cerebral injuries were not associated with the occurrence of these involuntary movements. Two patients with asymmetrical cerebellar deformity caused by compression due to a cystic lesion did not show these involuntary movements. The movements appeared around the corrected age of 3 months, and they disturbed the patients' acquisition of sitting ability. Nine patients with these involuntary movements developed severe athetotic cerebral palsy. These movements showed drug resistance, however, benzodiazepines had a partial effect in some patients. Recently, cerebellar injury in premature infants has received a lot of attention. We believe that the peculiar involuntary movements we observed in the present patient group may be caused by a particular type of cerebellar damage specific to premature infants born before 27 weeks of gestational age.
    No to hattatsu. Brain and development 05/2012; 44(3):239-43.
  • Article: Drug-resistant epilepsy.
    Katsuhiro Kobayashi, Harumi Yoshinaga, Yoko Ohtsuka
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    ABSTRACT: To the Editor: Kwan et al. (Sept. 8 issue)(1) provide a comprehensive review of the importance of drug-resistant epilepsy. The most serious related problem is catastrophic epilepsy in childhood,(2) which results in uncontrollable and devastating seizures that commence in early childhood; the prognosis for development in children with this condition is grim. Epileptic encephalopathy, which is a major part of catastrophic epilepsy, includes disorders in which the epileptic activity itself contributes to severe cognitive and behavioral impairments (e.g., West's syndrome).(3) Many children with catastrophic epilepsy have structural brain abnormalities that may be alleviated by neurosurgery.(4) Although such surgical procedures can . . .
    New England Journal of Medicine 12/2011; 365(23):2238-9; author reply 2239-40. · 53.30 Impact Factor
  • Article: [Lamotrigine add-on therapy for childhood-onset refractory epilepsy: comparison of the efficacy between 3 months and 6 months after initiation].
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    ABSTRACT: We investigated the effect of lamotrigine (LTG) add-on therapy in 50 patients with childhood-onset refractory epilepsy (25 males and 25 females): 15 with localization-related epilepsy, 33 with generalized epilepsy, and 2 with undetermined epilepsy. Twenty-four patients had experienced a period of West syndrome during their clinical course. Age at the start of LTG therapy ranged from 2 years 6 months to 41 years 2 months: <16 years in 43 and > or = 16 years in 7. Seizure frequency was > or = 1 per day in 36 patients (72%) and > or = 1 per week in 14 (28%). We increased the LTG dosage every two weeks in accordance with usage recommendations. We evaluated efficacy at two points: 3 and 6 months after the start of LTG. At the 6-month point, seizure freedom was achieved in 2 patients (4%), > or = 50% seizure reduction in 14 (28%), 25 to 50% seizure reduction in 20 (40%), no effect in 6 (12%), and aggravation in 4 (8%). Only 4 patients (8%) stopped LTG therapy within 6 months due to LTG-related mild skin rash in 2 and suspicion of seizure aggravation in the other 2. In terms of seizure types, seizure freedom or > or = 50% seizure reduction was achieved in 29% for epileptic spasms, 32% for tonic seizures, and 29% for partial seizures. A comparison between the 3- and 6-month points revealed that the efficacy level was increased or maintained in 77% of the patients and decreased in 23%. In most cases, the highest level of efficacy appeared within 3 months with doses that were smaller than maintenance doses. Observed CNS-related adverse effects included somnolence in 16 patients, irritability in 14, and sleep disturbance in 11. Positive psychotropic effects in daily activities were seen in 28 patients (56%). These effects appeared regardless of the change in seizure frequency with doses that were smaller than maintenance doses.
    No to hattatsu. Brain and development 11/2011; 43(6):453-8.
  • Article: Bilaterally independent epileptic spasms in a case of Aicardi syndrome.
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    ABSTRACT: A girl with Aicardi syndrome was observed to have two distinct types of asymmetric epileptic spasms, as detected by ictal video-EEG recording at three months of age. When the two types of spasm concurred, they showed no mutual interactions based on either clinical or EEG aspects. This observation does not support the hypothesis that the brainstem always plays an initiating role in generating spasms. [Published with video sequences].
    Epileptic disorders: international epilepsy journal with videotape 08/2011; 13(3):326-30. · 1.50 Impact Factor
  • Article: Amplitude-integrated EEG colored according to spectral edge frequency.
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    ABSTRACT: To improve the interpretability of figures containing an amplitude-integrated electroencephalogram (aEEG), we devised a color scale that allows us to incorporate spectral edge frequency (SEF) information into aEEG figures. Preliminary clinical assessment of this novel technique, which we call aEEG/SEF, was performed using neonatal and early infantile seizure data. We created aEEG, color density spectral array (DSA), and aEEG/SEF figures for focal seizures recorded in seven infants. Each seizure was paired with an interictal period from the same patient. After receiving instructions on how to interpret the figures, eight test reviewers examined each of the 72 figures displaying compressed data in aEEG, DSA, or aEEG/SEF form (12 seizures and 12 corresponding interictal periods) and attempted to identify each as a seizure or otherwise. They were not provided with any information regarding the original record. The median number of correctly identified seizures, out of a total of 12, was 7 (58.3%) for aEEG figures, 8 (66.7%) for DSA figures and 10 (83.3%) for aEEG/SEF figures; the differences among these are statistically significant (p=0.011). All reviewers concluded that aEEG/SEF figures were the easiest to interpret. The aEEG/SEF data presentation technique is a valid option in aEEG recordings of seizures.
    Epilepsy research 07/2011; 96(3):276-82. · 2.48 Impact Factor
  • Article: High-frequency oscillations in idiopathic partial epilepsy of childhood.
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    ABSTRACT: We explored high-frequency oscillations (HFOs) in scalp sleep electroencephalography (EEG) studies of patients with idiopathic partial epilepsy (IPE) of childhood in order to obtain a better understanding of the pathologic mechanisms underlying IPE. The subjects were 45 patients, including 32 with benign childhood epilepsy with centrotemporal spikes (BCECTS) and 13 with Panayiotopoulos syndrome (PS). A total of 136 EEG records were investigated through temporal expansion and filtering of traces and time-frequency spectral analysis. HFOs with frequency of 93.8-152.3 Hz (mean 126.2 ± 13.6 Hz) in the band of ripples were detected in association with spikes in 97 records (71.3%). Time from last seizure to the EEG recording was significantly shorter in those with spike-related HFOs than in the EEG recordings with spikes without HFOs (p = 0.006). Although time from last seizure reflects age, age at the time of recording was not significantly different between EEG studies with and without HFOs. Peak-power values of the high-frequency spots in time-frequency spectra were significantly negatively correlated with time from last seizure (R(2) = 0.122, p < 0.001) but not with age at the time of recording. Peak frequencies of the high-frequency spectral spots were not significantly correlated with age at the time of recording or with time from last seizure. The close relationship between the generation of spike-related HFOs and the period of active seizure occurrence indicated that HFOs may tell us more about epileptogenicity in IPE than the spikes themselves. Because there is a spectrum of pediatric epileptic disorders extending from the benign end of BCECTS to the encephalopathic end of epilepsy with continuous spike-waves during slow-wave sleep (CSWS), and HFOs that have already been detected in association with CSWS were more prominent than HFOs in IPE, intense spike-related HFOs may indicate poor prognosis.
    Epilepsia 07/2011; 52(10):1812-9. · 3.96 Impact Factor
  • Article: A long-term follow-up study of Dravet syndrome up to adulthood.
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    ABSTRACT: We intended to elucidate the whole clinical course of Dravet syndrome (DS) comprehensively, from infancy through adulthood. Subjects were 31 patients with DS (14 with typical DS, and 17 with borderline DS) who were followed from childhood to at least 18 years of age. Their seizures, abilities, and electroencephalography (EEG) findings were investigated and statistically analyzed. The clinical findings of the patients with typical DS and those with borderline DS became largely similar in adolescence and adulthood. Seizures were intractable in childhood in all patients, but suppressed in five (16.1%) during follow-up. Thirty-five (87.5%) of the 40 apparently generalized convulsive seizures that were captured by ictal EEG recording at 7 years of age or later were of focal origin. The seizure-free outcomes were significantly correlated with the experience of <3 episodes of convulsive status epilepticus, and also with disappearance of spikes on the follow-up EEGs. Mental outcomes involving less severe intellectual disability were correlated with the presence of occipital alpha rhythms in the background activity of the follow-up EEGs. Mean age at the recording of the follow-up EEGs was 23.8 years. Prevention of the occurrence of convulsive status epilepticus was indicated to be critically important for the improvement of seizure prognosis in DS.
    Epilepsia 06/2010; 51(6):1043-52. · 3.96 Impact Factor
  • Article: Scalp-recorded high-frequency oscillations in childhood sleep-induced electrical status epilepticus.
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    ABSTRACT: Because high-frequency oscillations (HFOs) may affect normal brain functions, we examined them using electroencephalography (EEG) in epilepsy with continuous spike-waves during slow-wave sleep (CSWS), a condition that can cause neuropsychological regression. In 10 children between 6 and 9 years of age with epilepsy with CSWS or related disorders, we investigated HFOs in scalp EEG spikes during slow-wave sleep through temporal expansion of the EEG traces with a low-cut frequency filter at 70 Hz as well as through time-frequency power spectral analysis. HFOs (ripples) concurrent with spikes were detected in the temporally expanded traces, and the frequency of the high-frequency peak with the greatest power in each patient's spectra ranged from 97.7 to 140.6 Hz. This is the first report on the detection of HFOs from scalp EEG recordings in epileptic patients. We speculate that epileptic HFOs may interfere with higher brain functions in epilepsy with CSWS.
    Epilepsia 04/2010; 51(10):2190-4. · 3.96 Impact Factor
  • Article: Age-dependent spike localization in various epileptic syndromes.
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    ABSTRACT: The electroencephalograms from 276 patients with localization-related epilepsy were analyzed to compare the distribution of spike foci in different age groups. Patients were divided into five groups according to spike location in the frontal, central, temporal, occipital, or multiple cortical regions. The age of peak incidence was earliest in patients with occipital foci, followed by those with central foci and then those with frontal foci. A bimodal age distribution of patients with temporal foci was observed. Symptomatic patients frequently exhibited multiple and frontal foci, and a large number of idiopathic patients had central, temporal, and occipital foci. Multiple foci were detected in 27.5% of idiopathic patients. Age-related spike localization was uniformly observed, regardless of the epileptic syndrome. The analysis of these data indicates that there are two types of multiple foci, one correlated with organic lesions and the other with an idiopathic, functional nature.
    Pediatric Neurology 12/2009; 41(6):440-4. · 1.52 Impact Factor
  • Article: [Reappraisal of vitamin B6 therapy for West syndrome].
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    ABSTRACT: Vitamin B6 (VB6) is used frequently as one of the first-choice drug for the treatment of West syndrome (WS) in Japan. We report 2 cases of symptomatic WS who had a good response to readministration of VB6. Case 1 was a 3-year-old girl diagnosed as having severe hydroencephalus. She developed WS at the age of 9 months. She was treated with ACTH, but relapsed when she was 1 year old. Despite treatment with various conventional drugs and second ACTH therapy, her seizures were not suppressed. We reviewed past treatment records in another hospital, and found that VB, treatment was stopped because her EEG did not improve within a week. We then retried VB6 therapy when she was 3 years and 6 months old, and as a result she became seizure-free and hypsarrhythmia disappeared on EEG within a month. Case 2 was a boy with severe cerebral palsy who was diagnosed as having WS at the age of 9 months. His MRI revealed bilateral subdural hematoma. Treatment was started with VB6, and he became seizure-free within several days. But 7 days after starting VB6, treatment was stopped because of the side effects. VPA was started instead, but his EEG showed gradual worsening. Then, we added a smaller dose of VB6 to VPA. His EEG improved dramatically, and his seizures have been controlled without any side effects. The present cases indicate the possible clinical usefulness of successful VB6 retrials even in older patients with severe organic lesions, by means of combined therapy with other drug, and alternative design of the dosing. However, we suspect there might be many cases in which the efficacy of VB6 therapy has not been properly assessed due to the short observation period and/or side effects.
    No to hattatsu. Brain and development 11/2009; 41(6):457-61.
  • Article: Detection of seizure-associated high-frequency oscillations above 500Hz.
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    ABSTRACT: High-frequency oscillations (HFOs) of up to 500Hz in EEG are considered to have close relation with ictogenesis. We had the unique opportunity to record a seizure in EEG with intracerebral macroelectrodes and a sampling frequency of 10kHz. Considering the notion that faster HFOs are likely more ictogenic, we investigated this ictal EEG data to find if even faster HFOs were present. HFOs were investigated in interictal spikes and seizure activity using time-frequency spectra: t values corresponding to frequencies from 100 to 1000Hz were obtained by comparison to the background and controlled by the false discovery rate (FDR). The seizure had a right hippocampal onset. HFOs up to 800Hz as well as HFOs below 500Hz built up in the hippocampal discharges more at the beginning of the seizure and during the preictal period than in the interictal period. These HFOs were visually confirmed in temporally expanded EEG traces. We demonstrated for the first time the existence of HFOs above 500Hz and up to 800Hz with intracerebral macroelectrodes in an epileptic patient; they occurred primarily in association with the seizure discharge. HFOs above 500Hz possibly reflect facilitation of ictogenic neuronal hypersynchronization.
    Epilepsy research 11/2009; 88(2-3):139-44. · 2.48 Impact Factor
  • Article: Characteristics of the synchronous occipital and frontopolar spike phenomenon in Panayiotopoulos syndrome.
    Harumi Yoshinaga, Katsuhiro Kobayashi, Yoko Ohtsuka
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    ABSTRACT: The synchronous appearance of an occipital and frontopolar spike (the Fp-O spike) is characteristic of Panayiotopoulos syndrome (PS). This phenomenon is also seen in various other types of epilepsy, particularly those that occur in childhood. Using dipole analysis and sequential mapping, we investigated the characteristics of the Fp-O spike observed in seven patients with PS and six patients with symptomatic localization-related epilepsy in childhood (SLE). We analyzed both one averaged spike and 20 manually selected successive individual Fp-O spikes for each patient through sequential topographical mapping with steps of 10 ms from 40 ms before to 40 ms after the negative maximum peak of each spike. For dipole analysis, a period of 40 ms before the maximum negative peak of the averaged spike in each patient was examined using equivalent current dipole localization software. Sequential mapping revealed that occipital negative peaks preceded frontal negative peaks in all of the PS patients, as well as in two of the six SLE patients. The four remaining SLE patients did not exhibit preceding occipital peaks. In all of the patients with PS, representative dipole locations were in the posterior area, whereas in SLE patients they were scattered over more anterior areas. The estimated sources of the Fp-O and O spikes appeared to have the same position and orientation in the two PS patients. We conclude that Fp-O spikes in PS occur as the result of a rapid spread of epileptic activity from the posterior areas to the anterior areas of the brain. Fp-O spikes in PS patients show a uniform topographical pattern and dipole location, whereas those in other patients show more heterogeneity in these features. These findings support the homogeneity of PS and thus its designation as a syndrome.
    Brain & development 10/2009; 32(8):603-8. · 1.74 Impact Factor
  • Article: Spectral analysis of EEG gamma rhythms associated with tonic seizures in Lennox-Gastaut syndrome.
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    ABSTRACT: EEG gamma rhythms, which are found in association with epileptic spasms in infants with West syndrome, were explored in the ictal EEGs of tonic seizures in older patients with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome (LGS) to investigate the pathophysiology of the disease. The subjects were 20 patients with LGS (11 males, 9 females; age range: 3 years 1 month to 29 years 3 months) who had at least one digitally recorded tonic seizure with minimal artifacts. A time-frequency analysis was applied to each patient's ictal EEG data. A total of 54 seizures were analyzed, excluding spasms in clusters. The ictal EEGs of the tonic seizures showed only diffuse desynchronization in 10 seizures, and desynchronization followed by rhythmic activity in 21. The ictal discharges started as rhythmic activity of varying amplitude without initial desynchronization in 23 seizures. In a total of 25 seizures from 13 patients, gamma rhythms with frequencies ranging from 43 to 101.6Hz were detected by temporal expansion of the ictal EEG traces and spectral analysis. In 24 (96%) of these seizures, gamma rhythms were observed at seizure onset corresponding to visually identified desynchronization. In the remaining seizure, gamma rhythms were found in association with transient suppression of high-amplitude rapid discharges. The detection of gamma rhythms in the ictal EEGs of tonic seizures indicated that some tonic seizures might have generative mechanisms in common with epileptic spasms, and that these mechanisms are possibly related to desynchronization at seizure onset.
    Epilepsy research 05/2009; 86(1):15-22. · 2.48 Impact Factor
  • Article: [Case of Sturge-Weber syndrome manifesting complex partial status epilepticus].
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    ABSTRACT: A three-year-old boy presented with status epilepticus with right hemiconvulsion and complex partial status epilepticus (CPSE) that were preceded by disturbance of consciousness and right hemiplegia just after a traumatic head injury. He was diagnosed as Sturge-Weber syndrome (SWS) because of the presence of a small cutaneous port-wine nevus and the nature of his MRI findings. The nevus was located in the middle of the forehead and was light in color. Intravenous drip infusion of lidocaine was effective for the treatment of CPSE, but the patient has experienced refractory complex partial seizures since then. It has not yet been reported that patients with SWS developed CPSE following head trauma, although it is known that patients with SWS can manifest convulsive status epilepticus. CPSE should be recognized as one of the seizure types of SWS.
    No to hattatsu. Brain and development 02/2009; 41(1):52-6.