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Dive into the research topics where Bosanka Jocic-Jakubi is active.

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Featured researches published by Bosanka Jocic-Jakubi.


Brain | 2015

CHD2 variants are a risk factor for photosensitivity in epilepsy

Elizabeth C. Galizia; Candace T. Myers; Costin Leu; Carolien G.F. de Kovel; Tatiana Afrikanova; María Lorena Cordero-Maldonado; Teresa Gonçalves Martins; M Jacmin; Suzanne Drury; V. Krishna Chinthapalli; Hiltrud Muhle; Manuela Pendziwiat; Thomas Sander; Ann Kathrin Ruppert; Rikke S. Møller; Holger Thiele; Roland Krause; Julian Schubert; Anna-Elina Lehesjoki; Peter Nürnberg; Holger Lerche; Aarno Palotie; Antonietta Coppola; Salvatore Striano; Luigi Del Gaudio; Christopher Boustred; Amy Schneider; Nicholas Lench; Bosanka Jocic-Jakubi; Athanasios Covanis

Photosensitivity in epilepsy is common and has high heritability, but its genetic basis remains uncertain. Galizia et al. reveal an overrepresentation of unique variants of CHD2 — which encodes the transcriptional regulator ‘chromodomain helicase DNA-binding protein 2’ — in photosensitive epilepsies, and show that chd2 knockdown in zebrafish causes photosensitivity.


Epilepsy & Behavior | 2006

Verbal memory impairment in children with focal epilepsy.

Bosanka Jocic-Jakubi; Nebojša Jović

Findings of both material- and hemisphere-specific influence on memory performance in children with epilepsy are inconsistent. Verbal memory of 80 children with focal epilepsy, aged 7 to 16, was assessed and compared with verbal memory of 80 healthy schoolchildren. The Verbal Selective Reminding test was used to distinguish between patients with left-sided (N=38) and patients with right-sided (N=42) electroencephalographic focal abnormalities. In addition, groups with temporal (N=36) and extratemporal (N=44) focal epilepsy were compared. Effects of seizure-related variables were also assessed. Children with focal epilepsy scored significantly lower on tests when compared with the healthy group. Lateralization of the EEG focus was not found to significantly affect verbal memory performance. Only the CLTR component of the Verbal Selective Reminding test was susceptible to lateralization and localization effects. Differences between the group with left and the group with right temporal epilepsy (P<0.03) and between the group with temporal and the group with extratemporal epilepsy (P<0.01) reached statistical significance.


Epileptic Disorders | 2010

Convulsions associated with gastroenteritis in the spectrum of benign focal epilepsies in infancy: 30 cases including four cases with ictal EEG recording

Raffaella Cusmai; Bosanka Jocic-Jakubi; Laura Cantonetti; Natia Japaridze; Federico Vigevano

AbtractBenign convulsions associated with gastroenteritis are now recognized as a clinical entity, characterized by an acute cluster of afebrile seizures during an episode of mild diarrhoea with excellent prognosis. We observed 30 children who each experienced at least two seizures associated with mild gastroenteritis. The inclusion criteria were: afebrile seizures during gastroenteritis, dehydration at ≤ 5%, normal neurological findings, normal psychomotor development and no underlying pathology according to laboratory and neuroimaging studies. Mean age was 21 months (range: 6–38). Familial history for epilepsy was positive in 3/30 (10%) and for febrile convulsions in 11/30 (36.6%). Seizure onset was mainly on the third day of gastroenteritis. Seizures were described as generalised by parents in 16/30 patients (53.3%). We directly observed seizures in 14/30 patients (47.7%), and the semiology was partial with secondary generalisation. Focal onset was confirmed in two patients by EEG and in two patients by video-EEG recording. Twenty of 30 patients (66.6%) received antiepileptic drugs during the acute phase. Ten patients (33.3%) received no treatment. During follow-up (mean duration: 53 months), one patient had an isolated afebrile seizure and two others a febrile seizure. At the end of follow-up, antiepileptic treatment was withdrawn for all but two patients. None developed epilepsy. Although the pathogenesis of this clinical entity is unknown, we hypothesize that mild gastroenteritis may provoke a transient brain dysfunction which in turn provokes seizures in children with genetically determined susceptibility.


Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology | 2008

Malignant migrating partial seizures in Aicardi syndrome

Bosanka Jocic-Jakubi; Lieven Lagae

This article reports on a female infant with Aicardi syndrome presenting with malignant migrating partial seizures from her first day of life. Initially, unilateral tonic seizures were seen with contralateral ictal electroencephalogram findings. Typically, these tonic seizures were accompanied by head and eye deviation and were followed by a tonic seizure on the other side of the body. At 6 months of age she developed epileptic spasms. She showed no motor development, did not respond to eye contact, and was nasogastric tube‐fed. The epilepsy syndrome in this child is refractory to antiepileptic treatment and there is no psychomotor development. This case expands the phenotype of this catastrophic epileptic encephalopathy and suggests that the corpus callosum is not necessary for the ‘migration’ of partial seizures in this syndrome.


Seizure-european Journal of Epilepsy | 2015

Clinical and genetic analysis of a family with two rare reflex epilepsies

Dorothée Kasteleijn-Nolst Trenité; Linda Volkers; Eric Strengman; Herman M. Schippers; Willem Perquin; Gerrit-Jan de Haan; Anastasia O. Gkountidi; Ruben van 't Slot; Stan F. van de Graaf; Bosanka Jocic-Jakubi; Giuseppe Capovilla; Athanasios Covanis; Pasquale Parisi; Pierangelo Veggiotti; M. Brinciotti; Gemma Incorpora; Marta Piccioli; Laura Cantonetti; Samuel F. Berkovic; Ingrid E. Scheffer; Eva H. Brilstra; Anja C. M. Sonsma; Adri J. Bader; Carolien G.F. de Kovel; Bobby P. C. Koeleman

PURPOSE To determine clinical phenotypes, evolution and genetic background of a large family with a combination of two unusual forms of reflex epilepsies. METHOD Phenotyping was performed in eighteen family members (10 F, 8 M) including standardized EEG recordings with intermittent photic stimulation (IPS). Genetic analyses (linkage scans, Whole Exome Sequencing (WES) and Functional studies) were performed using photoparoxysmal EEG responses (PPRs) as affection status. RESULTS The proband suffered from speaking induced jaw-jerks and increasing limb jerks evoked by flickering sunlight since about 50 years of age. Three of her family members had the same phenotype. Generalized PPRs were found in seven members (six above 50 years of age) with myoclonus during the PPR. Evolution was typical: Sensitivity to lights with migraine-like complaints around adolescence, followed by jerks evoked by lights and spontaneously with dropping of objects, and strong increase of light sensitivity and onset of talking induced jaw jerks around 50 years. Linkage analysis showed suggestive evidence for linkage to four genomic regions. All photosensitive family members shared a heterozygous R129C mutation in the SCNM1 gene that regulates splicing of voltage gated ion channels. Mutation screening of 134 unrelated PPR patients and 95 healthy controls, did not replicate these findings. CONCLUSION This family presents a combination of two rare reflex epilepsies. Genetic analysis favors four genomic regions and points to a shared SCNM1 mutation that was not replicated in a general cohort of photosensitive subjects. Further genetic studies in families with similar combination of features are warranted.


Seizure-european Journal of Epilepsy | 2009

Frontal-onset absences in children: associated with worse outcome? a replication study

Bosanka Jocic-Jakubi; Marina Jovanovic; Dojranka Stanković Janković; Lieven Lagae


Epilepsy & Behavior | 2009

Health-Related Quality of Life Measure for Children with Epilepsy (CHEQOL-25): Preliminary data for the Serbian version

Dejan Stevanovic; Darija Kisic Tepavcevic; Bosanka Jocic-Jakubi; Marina Jovanovic; Tatjana Pekmezovic; Aneta Lakic; Gabriel M. Ronen


Neurology India | 2015

Adverse effects of antiepileptic drugs and quality of life in pediatric epilepsy

M. Jovanovic; Bosanka Jocic-Jakubi; Dejan Stevanovic


European Journal of Paediatric Neurology | 2007

Epileptic encephalopathy with bilateral continuous spike-waves during slow sleep in a child with vacuolating megalencephalic leukoencephalopathy.

Bosanka Jocic-Jakubi; Žarko Martinović; Duško Kozić


European Journal of Paediatric Neurology | 2017

Everolimus treatment in patient with tuberous sclerosis complex and giant cell astrocytoma (SEGA) – Kuwait experience

Bosanka Jocic-Jakubi; Asma Al Tawari; Lada Cindro Heberle

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Laura Cantonetti

Boston Children's Hospital

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Lieven Lagae

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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