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Brain-responsive neurostimulation in patients with medically intractable seizures arising from eloquent and other neocortical areas.

Barbara C JobstRitu KapurGregory L BarkleyCarl W BazilMichel J BergGregory K BergeyJane G BoggsSydney S CashAndrew J ColeMichael S DuchownyRobert B DuckrowJonathan C EdwardsStephan EisenschenkA James FesslerNathan B FountainEric B GellerAlica M GoldmanRobert R GoodmanRobert E GrossRyder P GwinnChristianne HeckAamr A HerekarLawrence J HirschDavid King-StephensDouglas R LabarW R MarshKimford J MeadorIan MillerEli M MizrahiAnthony M MurroDileep R NairKatherine H NoePiotr W OlejniczakYong D ParkPaul RuteckiVicenta SalanovaRaj D ShethChristopher SkidmoreMichael C SmithDavid C SpencerShraddha SrinivasanWilliam TatumPaul Van NessDavid G VosslerRobert E WharenGregory A WorrellDaniel YoshorRichard S ZimmermanTara L SkarpaasMartha J Morrell
Published in: Epilepsia (2017)
Brain-responsive stimulation represents a safe and effective treatment option for patients with medically intractable epilepsy, including adults with seizures of neocortical onset, and those with onsets from eloquent cortex.
Keyphrases
  • resting state
  • functional connectivity
  • white matter
  • cancer therapy
  • temporal lobe epilepsy
  • cerebral ischemia
  • drug delivery
  • subarachnoid hemorrhage
  • combination therapy
  • brain injury
  • smoking cessation