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Extratemporal lobe circuits in temporal lobe epilepsy

Epilepsy & Behavior, 2014
There is increasing interest in the functional anatomy of epilepsy with the goal to identify the critical nodes in the seizure circuits so that therapy can be directed at them. This goal is especially important because direct delivery of therapy, either through electrical stimulation, drug infusion, or molecular therapies such as optogenetics, has ...
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Accessory hepatic lobe

Surgical and Radiologic Anatomy, 2011
The aim of the present communication was to describe an accessory hepatic lobe in two patients and to outline the significance of the timely identification of this very rare anatomic variation for the clinical practice.In the course of right hemihepatectomy, accessory liver lobes were detected in two patients.
Daniel V, Kostov, Georgi L, Kobakov
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Frontal lobe ataxia

Surgical Neurology, 1995
Gait abnormalities often result from disorders intrinsic to the cerebellum. Gait difficulties resulting from frontal lobe disease are less common but well recognized. The pathophysiologic mechanism of this type of ataxia is not well understood. One promising explanation implicates involvement of the frontopontocerebellar tract (Arnold's bundle).
J B, Terry, R N, Rosenberg
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Middle Lobe Syndrome

The Annals of Thoracic Surgery, 1983
A review of the major literature dealing with the middle lobe syndrome shows that benign inflammatory disease is the most common etiological factor (62%), with bronchiectasis responsible for at least a quarter of the patients in these series. Early workers indicated that carcinoma rarely originates in the right middle lobe; however, 22% of patients ...
R B, Wagner, M R, Johnston
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Temporal Lobe Epilepsy

Journal of Neurosurgery, 2005
Abstract Object. The syndrome of medial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE) may occur in patients in whom magnetic resonance (MR) images demonstrate normal findings. In these patients, there is no evidence of hippocampal sclerosis on neuroimaging, and histopathological examination of the resected hippocampus does not reveal significant neuron loss.
Ross P. Carne   +8 more
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Middle-Lobe Syndrome

New England Journal of Medicine, 1955
A TELECTASIS with chronic pneumonitis involving the right middle lobe has received considerable attention since this phenomenon was classified as a clinicopathological entity called "middle-lobe syndrome" by Graham, Burford and Mayer1 in 1948. These investigators presented a group of 12 cases of presumably nontuberculous atelectasis and chronic ...
G E, Lindskog, H C, Spear
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Frontal lobe function

Brain Injury, 1989
This article reviews, analyses, and provides commentary on the most recent major works pertaining to frontal lobe function. Other references are included, but only as they arise within the texts themselves. The overriding intention is to provide a comprehensive yet condensed reference on the frontal lobes.
D. Frank Benson   +2 more
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Frontal Lobe Seizures

Psychiatric Clinics of North America, 2005
Despite the fact that clinical characteristics of frontal lobe seizures have been recently described better, differentiating seizures of frontal lobe origin from NES on clinical grounds alone is difficult. The difficulty has been compounded by the fact that both inter-ictal and ictal EEG can be normal or nonspecific, and the same is true of imaging ...
Barbara C, Jobst, Peter D, Williamson
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MIDDLE LOBE SYNDROME

Archives of Surgery, 1950
CHRONIC nonspecific pneumonitis with atelectasis occurring in the middle lobe of the right lung has recently been classified as a clinical entity and been called "middle lobe syndrome." Graham, Burford and Mayer 1 and also Paulson and Shaw 2 have called attention to the lesion.
F R, HARPER, W B, CONDON, W H, WIERMAN
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Frontal lobe syndromes

2019
The frontal lobes contain a complex set of diverse anatomic regions that form multiple distinct, complex networks with cortical and subcortical regions. Damage to these cortical-subcortical networks can have dramatic behavioral consequences, ranging from apathy to impairments in executive functioning.
Justin, Reber, Daniel, Tranel
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