Journal article
Neurostimulation for Generalized Epilepsy: Should Therapy be Syndrome-specific?
AEL Warren, S Tobochnik, MMJ Chua, H Singh, MA Stamm, JD Rolston
Neurosurgery Clinics of North America | Published : 2024
Abstract
Current applications of neurostimulation for generalized epilepsy use a one-target-fits-all approach that is agnostic to the specific epilepsy syndrome and seizure type being treated. The authors describe similarities and differences between the 2 "archetypes" of generalized epilepsy-Lennox-Gastaut syndrome and Idiopathic Generalized Epilepsy-and review recent neuroimaging evidence for syndrome-specific brain networks underlying seizures. Implications for stimulation targeting and programming are discussed using 5 clinical questions: What epilepsy syndrome does the patient have? What brain networks are involved? What is the optimal stimulation target? What is the optimal stimulation paradigm..
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Grants
Awarded by National Institutes of Health
Funding Acknowledgements
S. Tobochnik is supported in part by a VA Career Development Award (V1CDA2022-68) and has received research support from Eisai. J.D. Rolston is supported in part by an NIH/NINDS career development award (K23 NS114178) . The EEG-fMRI data acquired and analyzed in this article were supported by NHMRC project grants #628725 and #1108881 (PI: A/Prof John Archer, University of Melbourne) .