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Dive into the research topics where Max R. Trenerry is active.

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Featured researches published by Max R. Trenerry.


Neurology | 1993

MRI hippocampal volumes and memory function before and after temporal lobectomy

Max R. Trenerry; C. R. Jack; Robert J. Ivnik; F. W. Sharbrough; G. D. Cascino; Kathryn A. Hirschorn; W. R. Marsh; Patrick J. Kelly; F. B. Meyer

We investigated the relationship between preoperative MRI hippocampal volumes and clinical neuropsychological memory test data obtained before and after temporal lobectomy and amygdalohippocampectomy for intractable epilepsy in 44 left (LTL) and 36 right (RTL) temporal lobectomy patients. In LTL patients, the difference (right minus left hippocampal volume) between hippocampal volumes (DHF) was significantly (p < 0.001) correlated (r = 0.61) with postoperative verbal memory change as measured by a delayed memory percent retention score from the Wechsler Memory Scale-Revised, Logical Memory subtest. DHF was also positively associated with postoperative memory for abstract geometric designs in LTL patients (r = 0.49, p < 0.005). Resection of a relatively nonatrophic left hippocampus was associated with poorer verbal and visual memory outcome. In RTL patients, larger right adjusted (for total intracranial volume) hippocampal volume was associated with decline in visual-spatial learning, but not memory, following surgery. MRI hippocampal volume data appear to provide meaningful information in evaluating the risk for memory impairment following temporal lobectomy.


Neurology | 2005

Neurologic manifestations in welders with pallidal MRI T1 hyperintensity

Keith A. Josephs; J. E. Ahlskog; Kevin J. Klos; Neeraj Kumar; Robert D. Fealey; Max R. Trenerry; Clayton T. Cowl

Background: Neurologic symptoms have been attributed to manganese fumes generated during welding. Increased T1 MRI signal in the basal ganglia is a biologic marker of manganese accumulation. Recent studies have associated welding and parkinsonism, but generally without MRI corroboration. Objective: To characterize the clinical and neuropsychological features of patients with MRI basal ganglia T1 hyperintensity, who were ultimately diagnosed with neurotoxicity from welding fumes. Methods: The medical records of welders referred to the Department of Neurology with neurologic problems and basal ganglia T1 hyperintensity were reviewed. Results: All eight patients were male career welders with increased T1 basal ganglia signal on MRI of the brain. Several different clinical syndromes were recognized: a parkinsonian syndrome (three patients), a syndrome of multifocal myoclonus and limited cognitive impairment (two patients), a mixed syndrome with vestibular–auditory dysfunction (two patients), and minor subjective cognitive impairment, anxiety, and sleep apnea (one patient). Neuropsychometric testing suggested subcortical or frontal involvement. Inadequate ventilation or lack of personal respiratory protection during welding was a common theme. Conclusions: Welding without proper protection was associated with syndromes of parkinsonism, multifocal myoclonus, mild cognitive impairment, and vestibular–auditory dysfunction. The MRI T1 hyperintensity in the basal ganglia suggests that these may have been caused by manganese neurotoxicity.


Epilepsia | 1992

Long-term follow-up of stereotactic lesionectomy in partial epilepsy: predictive factors and electroencephalographic results.

G. D. Cascino; Patrick J. Kelly; Frank W. Sharbrough; Joseph F. Hulihan; Kathryn A. Hirschorn; Max R. Trenerry

Summary: We performed an extended follow‐up study assessing the efficacy of stereotactic lesionectomy in 23 patients with foreign‐tissue lesions and intractable partial epilepsy. Sixteen lesions involved functional or eloquent cortex as determined by anatomic localization. By definition, the surgical objective in these patients was excision of the lesion, and not the surrounding cerebral cortex. The mean duration of follow‐up was 48.5 months (range 26–69 months). Seventeen patients (74%) had a significant reduction in seizures (90%) after lesionectomy. Thirteen patients (56%) had a class I operative out‐come (seizure‐free, single seizure episode, or auras only). Five of these patients were successfully discontinued from antiepileptic drug (AED) therapy. Patients with temporal lobe lesions were statistically less likely to be rendered seizure‐free (p < 0.05). Age at operation, duration of epilepsy, and underlying pathology were not significant predictors of seizure outcome. The anatomic distribution of extracranial EEG recorded epileptiform activity did not appear to be an important determinant of outcome. The absence of interictal epileptiform activity in the 3‐month postoperative EEG correlated with a significant reduction in seizures. Long‐term follow‐up indicates that lesionectomy may be effective in select patients with medically refractory partial seizure disorders.


Epilepsia | 1996

Routine EEG and temporal lobe epilepsy: Relation to long-term EEG monitoring, quantitative MRI, and operative outcome

Gregory D. Cascino; Max R. Trenerry; Elson L. So; Frank W. Sharbrough; Cheolsu Shin; Terrence D. Lagerlund; Mary L. Zupanc; Clifford R. Jack

Summary: Purpose: To investigate the relation among routine EEG, long‐term EEG monitoring (LTM), quantitative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and surgical outcome in temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE).


Epilepsia | 2009

Epilepsy surgery outcomes in temporal lobe epilepsy with a normal MRI.

Michael L. Bell; Satish C. Rao; Elson L. So; Max R. Trenerry; Noojan Kazemi; S. Matt Stead; Gregory D. Cascino; Richard W. Marsh; Fredric B. Meyer; Robert E. Watson; Caterina Giannini; Gregory A. Worrell

Purpose:  To determine the long‐term efficacy of anterior temporal lobectomy for medically refractory temporal lobe epilepsy in patients with nonlesional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).


Epilepsy Research | 1992

MRI in the presurgical evaluation of patients with frontal lobe epilepsy and children with temporal lobe epilepsy" pathologic correlation and prognostic importance*

Gregory D. Cascino; Clifford R. Jack; Joseph E. Parisi; W. Richard Marsh; Patrick J. Kelly; Frank W. Sharbrough; Kathryn A. Hirschorn; Max R. Trenerry

We performed magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) using a high-field strength magnet (1.5 T) in two series of 53 patients with intractable partial epilepsy of frontal lobe or temporal lobe origin who subsequently received ablative surgery for their seizure disorder. In the first series of patients the pathologic correlation and prognostic importance of an MRI-identified lesion in the frontal lobe were assessed. Twenty-five percent of the patients with negative MRI studies and 67% of patients with neuroimaging abnormalities restricted to the frontal lobe, were seizure-free at a minimum duration of follow-up of 1 year. None of the patients with a multilobar MRI-detected abnormality was seizure-free postoperatively. In the second study the sensitivity and specificity of MRI-based hippocampal volumetry was determined in pediatric patients with partial epilepsy of temporal lobe origin unrelated to foreign-tissue pathology. Hippocampal formation atrophy in the epileptic temporal lobe was identified in 63% of patients. The sensitivity and specificity of hippocampal volumetry was 100% in patients with mesial temporal sclerosis. The presence of an MRI-detected epileptogenic lesion in the frontal lobe and hippocampal formation atrophy in the temporal lobe may correlate with the underlying pathology and affect the identification of potential candidates for epilepsy surgery.


Epilepsy Research | 1993

Operative strategy in patients with MRI-identified dual pathology and temporal lobe epilepsy

Gregory D. Cascino; Clifford R. Jack; Joseph E. Parisi; Frank W. Sharbrough; Curtis P. Schreiber; Patrick J. Kelly; Max R. Trenerry

We performed a prospective study using preoperative magnetic resonance imaging to identify hippocampal formation atrophy in 15 consecutive patients with intractable partial epilepsy who had undergone a stereotactic resection of an extrahippocampal temporal lobe foreign-tissue lesion. A stereotactic lesionectomy was performed in all patients, i.e., only the imaging-defined lesion itself was resected. Hippocampal formation atrophy was identified in three of the 15 patients. Neuroimaging-detected hippocampal formation atrophy has been shown to be a reliable marker of moderate to severe mesial temporal sclerosis. All patients with hippocampal formation atrophy had an unfavorable operative outcome. Pathological examination of the hippocampus in one patient with neuroimaging-identified hippocampal formation atrophy who subsequently received an anterior temporal lobectomy revealed mesial temporal sclerosis. Nine of the 12 patients without hippocampal formation atrophy experienced a significant reduction in seizure tendency after lesionectomy. The surgically excised hippocampus in one patient without hippocampal formation atrophy who later underwent a temporal lobectomy showed no significant neuronal loss. Results of this study have modified the surgical approach taken at this institution in patients with temporal lobe lesional epilepsy. Patients with magnetic resonance imaging-defined dual pathology now undergo a temporal lobectomy which includes resection of the hippocampus and the foreign-tissue lesion.


Neuropsychology (journal) | 1999

Visual confrontation naming following left anterior temporal lobectomy : A comparison of surgical approaches

Bruce P. Hermann; Kenneth Perrine; Gordon J. Chelune; William B. Barr; David W. Loring; Esther Strauss; Max R. Trenerry; Michael Westerveld

Change in visual confrontation naming was examined following left (speech dominant) anterior temporal lobectomy (ATL) as a function of surgical technique and patient characteristics. Two hundred seventeen patients with intractable left temporal lobe epilepsy were selected according to standard criteria across 8 centers, and combined into 4 surgical approaches to ATL: (a) tailored resections with intraoperative mapping of eloquent cortex, (b) tailored resections with extraoperative mapping, (c) standard resections with sparing of superior temporal gyrus, and (d) standard resections including excision of superior temporal gyrus. Changes in visual confrontation naming were examined with an index of reliable change derived from an independent sample of 90 nonsurgical patients with complex partial seizures. Results showed significant decline in visual confrontation naming following left ATL, regardless of surgical technique. Across surgical approaches, the risk for decline in visual confrontation naming was associated with a later age of seizure onset and more extensive resection of lateral temporal neocortex.


Epilepsy Research | 1993

Quantitative MRI hippocampal volumes: association with onset and duration of epilepsy, and febrile convulsions in temporal lobectomy patients☆

Max R. Trenerry; Clifford R. Jack; Frank W. Sharbrough; Gregory D. Cascino; Kathryn A. Hirschorn; W. Richard Marsh; Patrick J. Kelly; Fredric B. Meyer

The relationships between preoperatively acquired MRI-based hippocampal volumes (HV), seizure disorder onset and duration, and early childhood febrile convulsions were investigated retrospectively with data from 72 left and 56 right temporal lobectomy patients. Patients with lesional pathology and heterotopic abnormalities were excluded. Age at development of spontaneous seizures unprovoked by an acute illness defined age of seizure disorder onset. Age of onset was subtracted from age at neurosurgery to determine duration. MRI variables included in this study were the right and left HV divided by total intracranial volume (RAHV, LAHV), and the right-left hippocampal difference (DHF). Partial correlations were used to better isolate relationships with onset of recurrent seizures corrected for age at surgery, and age at neurosurgery corrected for age of recurrent seizure onset. Partial correlations between age at neurosurgery and volume were not significant in either group. LAHV (r = 0.42, P < 0.0003) and DHF (r = -0.49, P < 0.0001) were correlated with age of onset in the left lobectomy group. Correlations in the right lobectomy group were not significant. The presence of a febrile convulsion was associated with smaller LAHV (F(1,70) = 10.54, P < 0.002) and larger DHF (F(1,70) = 11.36, P < 0.002) in left temporal lobectomy patients. The presence of a febrile convulsion in the right temporal group was associated with a slightly smaller DHF (F(1,56) = 5.90, P < 0.02), and slightly smaller RAHV (F(1,56) = 4.49, P < 0.04). These data suggest that hippocampal atrophy remains stable over the duration of temporal lobe onset seizure disorders, and is associated with early onset of recurrent seizures in left temporal patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology | 1995

Predicting Cognitive Impairment in Epilepsy: Findings from the Bozeman Epilepsy Consortium*

Esther Strauss; David W. Loring; Gordon Chelune; Michael A. Hunter; Bruce P. Hermann; Kenneth Perrine; Michael Westerveld; Max R. Trenerry; William B. Barr

We examined the contribution of age of seizure onset, seizure duration, seizure laterality, seizure location, gender, handedness, and cerebral speech representation to cognitive attainment in 1,141 patients with medically refractory seizures. The combined influence of the predictor variables was modest. Age of seizure onset was the best single indicator of Full Scale IQ (partial r = .23) and General Memory (partial r = .20). Laterality and location of dysfunction, and cerebral speech dominance were also relevant and independent indicators of aspects of cognition. Except for age of onset of seizures (early onset was associated with poorer cognitive attainment), however, the magnitude of the effects was limited.

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Bruce P. Hermann

Memorial Hospital of South Bend

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William B. Barr

Long Island Jewish Medical Center

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