Brain : a journal of neurology
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The purpose of this study was to assess whether the histological subtype of focal cortical dysplasia and dual pathology affect surgical outcome in patients with medically intractable epilepsy due to focal cortical dysplasia (FCD). We retrospectively analysed the outcome of 67 patients from 2 to 66 years of age at follow-up periods of 6 to 48 months after epilepsy surgery. Histological subtypes were classified according to Palmini and included a few cases with mild histological abnormalities corresponding to the definition of mild malformations of cortical development. ⋯ We conclude that patients with FCD type 1 and mMCD had a better outcome compared with those with more severe forms of cortical dysplasia. A higher incidence of FCD type 1 in temporal localization did not allow the effects of histological subtype and localization to be separated. A subanalysis of extratemporal FCDs, however, revealed a similar tendency for a better outcome with FCD type 1, suggesting that the histological subtype itself seems to be at least a relevant cofactor influencing postsurgical outcome.
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The excitability of the cerebral cortex in the interictal state of migraine appears to be fundamental in the brain's susceptibility to migraine attacks. Subpopulations of cortical neurons are reported to have different physiological response properties to different interstimulus intervals (ISIs) and, hence, may be differentially altered or modulated in migraine. The aim of this study therefore was to evaluate response characteristics of temporally and spatially defined neuronal subpopulations in the cortex of migraineurs. ⋯ This hyperexcitability appears not to be related to habituation since habituation was not found in the control subjects. In contrast, the magnitude of P35m is not pathophysiologically linked to the interictal state of migraine. Furthermore, the cellular mechanisms causing ISI-dependent depression of N20m and P35m are not altered in migraine.