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Dive into the research topics where Kathleen Meagher-Villemure is active.

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Featured researches published by Kathleen Meagher-Villemure.


Pediatric Neurosurgery | 1995

Lesionectomy of MRI detected lesions in children with epilepsy.

José L. Montes; Bernard Rosenblatt; Jean-Pierre Farmer; Augustin M. O’Gorman; Fred Andermann; Gordon V. Watters; Kathleen Meagher-Villemure

The results of complete excision of cerebral lesions detected by MRI in 18 children presenting with epilepsy were analyzed. There were 14 boys and 4 girls with a mean age of 9.2 years. The average age of onset of seizures was 6.8 years. The mean time from onset of seizures to surgery was 2.3 years. Often, CT scans suggested that the lesions were indolent. MRI was better in differentiating neoplastic from developmental lesions. Angiography was non-contributory in this series. Interictal EEGs showed epileptiform activity correlating with imaging studies in 54% of children. The lesion was completely surgically excised in all patients. This was confirmed by intra-operative ultrasound and postoperative imaging. Electrocorticography was performed prior to and after the resection, but residual spiking did not lead to further resection. The average postoperative follow-up was 5.7 years. Five patients had low grade astrocytomas, 4 had gangliogliomas, 1 a mixed astrocytoma-oligodendroglioma, 3 had cortical dysplasia, 2 infantile desmoplastic gangliogliomas, 2 hamartomata, and 1 cavernous angioma. Sixteen patients have been seizure-free since surgery. Only 2 have partial seizures. Thus, all patients benefited from the resection, with respect to seizure control. In those with temporal lobe lesions, improvement in IQ was seen postoperatively. Early consideration of surgery in patients with epilepsy and lesions demonstrated by MRI is suggested.


Pediatric Neurology | 1998

Infantile Epileptic Encephalopathy (Ohtahara Syndrome) and Migrational Disorder

Steven P Miller; Marie-Emmanuelle Dilenge; Kathleen Meagher-Villemure; Augustin M. O’Gorman; Michael Shevell

A case of early infantile epileptic encephalopathy (EIEE) with suppression-bursts (Ohtahara syndrome) associated with a diffuse cerebral migrational and maturation disorder evident on microscopic examination is reported. Although virtually all reported cases of EIEE are secondary to a congenital or acquired structural malformation of cortical development, EIEE is sometimes identified only by detailed neuropathologic examination, as confirmed by this case report. In addition to the malformation of cortical development, the patient demonstrated an absence of gamma-aminobutyric acid in the cerebrospinal fluid. All children with EIEE should be thoroughly examined by magnetic resonance imaging, cerebrospinal fluid amino acid level determination, and detailed postmortem neuropathologic examination.


Childs Nervous System | 2005

The role of posterior fossa decompression in acute cerebellitis

S. de Ribaupierre; Kathleen Meagher-Villemure; Jean-Guy Villemure; J. Cotting; P. Y. Jeannet; F. Porchet; Roulet E; Jocelyne Bloch

BackgroundWe present two cases of children who were diagnosed with cerebellitis with acute cerebellar swelling. This rare pathology is potentially fatal, and no clear treatment guidelines are described in the literature.DiscussionConsidering our experience, we discuss the different therapeutic strategies and propose aggressive surgical measures consisting of external ventricular drainage and posterior fossa decompression in case of failure of early response to medical treatment to limit secondary cerebellar and brainstem lesions.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 1992

Brain dysgenesis and congenital intracerebral calcification associated with 3-hydroxyisobutyric aciduria

David Chitayat; Kathleen Meagher-Villemure; Orval Mamer; Augustin M. O'Gorman; David I. Hoar; Kenneth Silver; Charles R. Scriver

Monozygotic male twins born to nonconsanguineous parents had dysmorphic facial features, microcephaly, migrational brain disorder, and congenital intracerebral calcification. They excreted excessive amounts of 3-hydroxyisobutyric acid, a metabolite of valine, and had evidence of impaired oxidative metabolism and metabolic acidosis. The level of 3-hydroxyisobutyrate in stored samples of midtrimester amniotic fluid was found to be high. The association of 3-hydroxyisobutyric aciduria with brain dysgenesis is a newly recognized mendelian disorder; its recurrence in a family at risk is potentially avoidable by prenatal diagnosis.


Neurosurgery | 1996

Traumatic aneurysm from shaken baby syndrome: Case report

Cornelius H. Lam; José L. Montes; Jean Pierre Farmer; Augustin M. O'Gorman; Kathleen Meagher-Villemure

OBJECTIVE AND IMPORTANCE We present a 6-week-old infant who developed a traumatic aneurysm from clearly documented shaken baby syndrome. Despite the theoretical similarity in the mechanism of such injuries, this is the first aneurysm reported that resulted from such a cause. The infant is also the youngest reported patient to have suffered from a traumatic aneurysm. CLINICAL PRESENTATION Police records documented shaking of the child as well as direct impact on the childs head. Three weeks later, the patient developed an intracerebral hemorrhage, which was revealed by angiography to have resulted from a pericallosal artery aneurysm. TECHNIQUE The aneurysm was totally resected through a porencephalic cyst, which had developed secondary to ischemic injury to the brain. CONCLUSION The temporal course, as well as the location of this traumatic aneurysm, is similar to that in older patients.


Pediatric Neurology | 1992

Developmental bilateral perisylvian dysplasia

Michael Shevell; Lionel Carmant; Kathleen Meagher-Villemure

Acquired bilateral anterior opercular lesions result in the characteristic Foix-Chavany-Marie syndrome that features expressive dysphasia and pseudobulbar palsy. A developmental congenital variant that represents a restricted disorder of neuronal migration was recently reported. We report a newborn with autopsy-confirmed developmental bilateral perisylvian dysplasia. Polymicrogyria was found on detailed histologic study confirming the only prior pathologic study of this syndrome. The clinical heterogeneity of this disorder with neonatal and childhood modes of presentation is reviewed. Speculation regarding pathogenesis focuses on either a genetically determined selective aberration of neuronal migration or an in utero postmigration vascular accident.


Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences | 1995

Supratentorial ectopic ependymoma.

Olivier Vernet; Jean-Pierre Farmer; Kathleen Meagher-Villemure; José L. Montes

BACKGROUND Ependymomas usually arise from the ventricular surface. METHODS We report an 11-year-old female who presented with a supratentorial ectopic ependymoma. RESULTS The patient presented with a two-month-history of progressive headache, nausea and vomiting. Examination revealed papilledema, horizontal nystagmus, diplopia on upward gaze, and right pronator drift. CT scan showed an enhancing left precentral subcortical lesion measuring 3 cm in diameter with associated edema and mass effect. Its medial border was located 3 cm from the ependymal surface of the ventricle. A firm tumour was dissected from the centrum semiovale white matter, and removed in toto as confirmed on MRI. Pathological examination revealed histological, immuno-histochemical and electron microscopic features consistent with an ependymoma. Spine MRI and bone marrow aspirate, as well as lumbar puncture of cytology failed to show any dissemination. CONCLUSION From the literature review, this represents an exceptional ependymoma located at the distance from the ventricular system or cisterns. Different pathogenic alternatives are discussed.


Epilepsia | 2004

Surgical Treatment of Temporoparietooccipital Cortical Dysplasia in Infants: Report of Two Cases

Roy Thomas Daniel; Kathleen Meagher-Villemure; Eliane Roulet; Jean-Guy Villemure

Summary:  Purpose: Extensive multilobar cortical dysplasia in infants commonly is first seen with catastrophic epilepsy and poses a therapeutic challenge with respect to control of epilepsy, brain development, and psychosocial outcome. Experience with surgical treatment of these lesions is limited, often not very encouraging, and holds a higher operative risk when compared with that in older children and adults.


Intensive Care Medicine | 1994

Fulminant hepatic failure associated with status epilepticus in children: Three cases and a review of potential mechanisms

M. K. Decell; J. B. Gordon; Kenneth Silver; Kathleen Meagher-Villemure

Fulminant hepatic failure is a rare complication of status epilepticus. Although many of the anticonvulsants used to treat the seizures are known to have hepatotoxic properties, the exact mechanism leading to massive destruction of the liver following a prolonged seizure remains unclear. Three children are presented who developed fulminant hepatic failure following status epilepticus and subsequently died of multiple organ failure. The literature is reviewed with particular attention to the possible interaction between the anticonvulsants and the metabolic consequences of status epilepticus. We postulate that it is a combination of hypoxia and ischemia that occurs during a prolonged seizure with altered metabolism of free radicals secondary to the anticonvulsant drugs which leads to widespread hepatocyte membrane damage.


Childs Nervous System | 2000

Dysgenetic mesial temporal sclerosis: an unrecognized entity.

Olivier Vernet; Jean-Pierre Farmer; José L. Montes; Jean-Guy Villemure; Kathleen Meagher-Villemure

Abstract Mesial temporal sclerosis (MTS) is the most frequently encountered lesion in adult patients with intractable temporal epilepsy; it is found in isolation in approximately two-thirds of surgically treated cases. Whereas the exact etiology of MTS is still controversial, several reports suggest that this pathologic lesion is both the cause and the consequence of chronic seizures and develops progressively during childhood secondary to recurrent seizures. In order to evaluate the clinical importance of MTS in children, we retrospectively reviewed the clinical charts of children who underwent surgery for medically intractable temporal epilepsy and report cases presenting an amygdalo-hippocampic dual pathology. Six children aged 1.5–16 years (mean±SD: 7.5±3 years) presenting with partial complex seizures (5 cases) or extension spasms (1 case), with onset from 6 months to the age of 8.5 years (mean seizure onset±SD: 3±5 years) underwent anterior temporal lobectomy including resection of the amygdala and hippocampus. All patients exhibited variable degrees of severity of neuronal loss and gliosis in the amygdala and/or hippocampus. The pathological picture of MTS was not isolated, however. Careful pathological examination has thus shown foci of amygdalo-hippocampic neuronal dysplasia in six patients, with concomitant bilaminated fascia dentata in two cases. Postoperatively, no mortality or morbidity was encountered. After a mean follow-up of 2.5 years, four patients are seizure free. One patient had a 80% rate of improvement in seizure frequency, though still having occasional febrile convulsions. In another patient, complex partial seizures resolved, but rare episodes of absence were still observed. These data are in keeping with the hypothesis that MTS could be secondary to repeated seizures. The analysis of this series of patients could suggest that mesiotemporal dysplastic lesions within the amygdalo-hippocampic structures induce seizures, which, in turn, will favor the development of MTS during childhood. MTS could then lead to synaptic reorganization, which can express abnormal hyperexcitability and result in more recurrent seizures. In this way a vicious circle is set up, which may explain the progression of seizures in some patients.

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José L. Montes

Montreal Children's Hospital

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Augustin M. O'Gorman

Montreal Children's Hospital

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Gordon V. Watters

Montreal Children's Hospital

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Jean-Guy Villemure

Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital

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Deborah N. Black

Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital

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Olivier Vernet

Montreal Children's Hospital

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Bernard Rosenblatt

Montreal Children's Hospital

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