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Dive into the research topics where Sue Yudovin is active.

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Featured researches published by Sue Yudovin.


Neurology | 2004

Cerebral hemispherectomy Hospital course, seizure, developmental, language, and motor outcomes

R. Jonas; Snow T. Nguyen; B. Hu; Robert F. Asarnow; Christine LoPresti; Susan Curtiss; S. de Bode; Sue Yudovin; W. D. Shields; Harry V. Vinters; Gary W. Mathern

Objective: To compare hemispherectomy patients with different pathologic substrates for hospital course, seizure, developmental, language, and motor outcomes. Methods: The authors compared hemispherectomy patients (n = 115) with hemimegalencephaly (HME; n = 16), hemispheric cortical dysplasia (hemi CD; n = 39), Rasmussen encephalitis (RE; n = 21), infarct/ischemia (n = 27), and other/miscellaneous (n = 12) for differences in operative management, postsurgery seizure control, and antiepilepsy drug (AED) usage. In addition, Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scale (VABS) developmental quotients (DQ), language, and motor assessments were performed pre- or postsurgery, or both. Results: Surgically, HME patients had the greatest perioperative blood loss, and the longest surgery time. Fewer HME patients were seizure free or not taking AEDs 1 to 5 years postsurgery, but the differences between pathologic groups were not significant. Postsurgery, 66% of HME patients had little or no language and worse motor scores in the paretic limbs. By contrast, 40 to 50% of hemi CD children showed near normal language and motor assessments, similar to RE and infarct/ischemia cases. VABS DQ scores showed +5 points or more improvement postsurgery in 57% of patients, and hemi CD (+12.7) and HME (+9.1) children showed the most progress compared with RE (+4.6) and infarct/ischemia (−0.6) cases. Postsurgery VABS DQ scores correlated with seizure duration, seizure control, and presurgery DQ scores. Conclusions: The pathologic substrate predicted pre- and postsurgery differences in outcomes, with hemimegalencephaly (but not hemispheric cortical dysplasia) patients doing worse in several domains. Furthermore, shorter seizure durations, seizure control, and greater presurgery developmental quotients predicted better postsurgery developmental quotients in all patients, irrespective of pathology.


Epilepsia | 1999

Postoperative Seizure Control and Antiepileptic Drug Use in Pediatric Epilepsy Surgery Patients: The UCLA Experience, 1986–1997

Gary W. Mathern; Christopher C. Giza; Sue Yudovin; Harry V. Vinters; Warwick J. Peacock; D. Alan Shewmon; W. Donald Shields

Summary: Purpose: Young children with refractory symptomatic epilepsy are at risk for developing neurologic and cognitive disabilities. Stopping the seizures may prevent these disabilities, but it is unclear whether resective surgery is associated with adequate long‐term seizure control.


Neurology | 2005

Surgery for symptomatic infant-onset epileptic encephalopathy with and without infantile spasms

R. Jonas; Robert F. Asarnow; Christine LoPresti; Sue Yudovin; Susan Koh; Joyce Y. Wu; Raman Sankar; W. D. Shields; Harry V. Vinters; Gary W. Mathern

Children undergoing surgery with infant-onset epilepsy were classified into those with medically refractory infantile spasms (IS), successfully treated IS, and no IS history, and the groups were compared for pre- and postsurgery clinical and Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scale (VABS) developmental quotients (DQ). Children without an IS history were older at surgery and had longer epilepsy durations than those with IS despite similar substrates, surgeries, and seizure frequencies. In all groups, better postsurgery VABS-DQ scores were associated with early surgical intervention indicating that infant-onset epilepsy patients with or without IS are at risk for seizure-induced encephalopathy.


Neurology | 2010

Improved outcomes in pediatric epilepsy surgery The UCLA experience, 1986–2008

Marta Hemb; Tonicarlo Rodrigues Velasco; M.S. Parnes; Joyce Y. Wu; Jason T. Lerner; Joyce H. Matsumoto; Sue Yudovin; W. D. Shields; Raman Sankar; Noriko Salamon; Harry V. Vinters; Gary W. Mathern

Objective: Epilepsy neurosurgery is a treatment option for children with refractory epilepsy. Our aim was to determine if outcomes improved over time. Methods: Pediatric epilepsy surgery patients operated in the first 11 years (1986–1997; pre-1997) were compared with the second 11 years (1998–2008; post-1997) for differences in presurgical and postsurgical variables. Results: Despite similarities in seizure frequency, age at seizure onset, and age at surgery, the post-1997 series had more lobar/focal and fewer multilobar resections, and more patients with tuberous sclerosis complex and fewer cases of nonspecific gliosis compared with the pre-1997 group. Fewer cases had intracranial EEG studies in the post-1997 (0.8%) compared with the pre-1997 group (9%). Compared with the pre-1997 group, the post-1997 series had more seizure-free patients at 0.5 (83%, +16%), 1 (81%, +18%), 2 (77%, +19%), and 5 (74%, +29%) years, and more seizure-free patients were on medications at 0.5 (97%, +6%), 1 (88%, +9%), and 2 (76%, +29%), but not 5 (64%, +8%) years after surgery. There were fewer complications and reoperations in the post-1997 series compared with the pre-1997 group. Logistic regression identified post-1997 series and less aggressive medication withdrawal as the main predictors of becoming seizure-free 2 years after surgery. Conclusions: Improved technology and surgical procedures along with changes in clinical practice were likely factors linked with enhanced and sustained seizure-free outcomes in the post-1997 series. These findings support the general concept that clearer identification of lesions and complete resection are linked with better outcomes in pediatric epilepsy surgery patients.


Epilepsia | 2013

Subclinical early posttraumatic seizures detected by continuous EEG monitoring in a consecutive pediatric cohort.

Daniel H. Arndt; Jason T. Lerner; Joyce H. Matsumoto; Andranik Madikians; Sue Yudovin; Hannah Valino; David L. McArthur; Joyce Y. Wu; Michelle Leung; Farzad D. Buxey; Conrad W. Szeliga; Michele Van Hirtum-Das; Raman Sankar; Amy R. Brooks-Kayal; Christopher C. Giza

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is an important cause of morbidity and mortality in children, and early posttraumatic seizures (EPTS) are a contributing factor to ongoing acute damage. Continuous video‐EEG monitoring (cEEG) was utilized to assess the burden of clinical and electrographic EPTS.


Neurology | 2006

Magnetic source imaging localizes epileptogenic zone in children with tuberous sclerosis complex

Joyce Y. Wu; W. W. Sutherling; Susan Koh; Noriko Salamon; R. Jonas; Sue Yudovin; Raman Sankar; W. D. Shields; Gary W. Mathern

The authors assessed whether magnetoencephalography/magnetic source imaging (MEG/MSI) identified epileptogenic zones in patients with tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC). In six TSC children with focal seizures, ictal video-EEG predicted the region of resection with 56% sensitivity, 80% specificity, and 77% accuracy (p = 0.02), whereas interictal MEG/MSI fared better (100%, 94%, and 95%, respectively; p < 0.0001). Interictal MEG/MSI seems to identify epileptogenic zones more accurately in children with TSC and focal intractable epilepsy.


Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | 1991

Middle Childhood Onset of Interictal Psychosis

Rochelle Caplan; W. Donald Shields; Lisa Mori; Sue Yudovin

The authors describe three children (mean age = 7.8 years) with complex partial epilepsy, left temporal lobe involvement, and interictal schizophrenia-like psychosis. As described in adults with complex partial epilepsy, these children met DSM-III criteria for schizophrenia, their affect was intact, and they demonstrated no negative signs of schizophrenia. Unlike adult epileptic patients, these children demonstrated psychotic symptomatology despite inadequate seizure control and after a short latency period. The possible role of early onset seizures, temporal lobe lesions, and kindling on the developing brain are discussed.


Epilepsia | 2005

Status Epilepticus and Frequent Seizures: Incidence and Clinical Characteristics in Pediatric Epilepsy Surgery Patients

Susan Koh; ∗δ‖Gary W. Mathern; Gabrielle Glasser; Joyce Y. Wu; Donald C. Shields; Rinat Jonas; Sue Yudovin; Carlos Cepeda; Noriko Salamon; ‡§δ‖Harry V. Vinters; Raman Sankar

Summary:  Purpose: The literature suggests that pediatric epilepsy surgery cases that present in status epilepticus (SE) are an unusual occurrence. However, this concept is based on case reports, and the incidence and clinical characteristics of these patients have not been systematically assessed.


Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | 1993

Communication Deficits in Children Undergoing Temporal Lobectomy

Rochelle Caplan; Donald Guthrie; W. Donald Shields; Warwick J. Peacock; Harry V. Vinters; Sue Yudovin

OBJECTIVE To examine formal thought disorder and discourse (cohesive) devices that make speech coherent prospectively in seven children, aged 5.7 to 16.7 years, before and after temporal lobectomy for intractable cut points determined from sensitivity and specificity analyses of formal thought disorder and discourse measures in 22 children with complex partial seizure disorder and 45 normal children. RESULTS Before surgery, the mean illogical thinking and discourse scores of the surgical candidates were in the pathological range. After a mean postoperative follow-up period of 15.1 months, their illogical thinking (but not their discourse scores) decreased significantly to the normal range. CONCLUSIONS These preliminary findings are discussed in terms of the possible role of postsurgical changes in seizure control, behavior, antiepileptic drugs, cognition, and prefrontal function.


Epilepsia | 2004

Five or More Acute Postoperative Seizures Predict Hospital Course and Long-term Seizure Control after Hemispherectomy

Susan Koh; Snow T. Nguyen; Robert F. Asarnow; Christine LoPresti; Sue Yudovin; W. Donald Shields; Harry V. Vinters; Gary W. Mathern

Summary:  Purpose: Acute postoperative seizures (APOSs) are those that occur in the first 7 to 10 days after surgery, and previous studies in temporal lobe epilepsy patients support the notion that APOSs may foretell failure of long‐term seizure control. It is unknown whether APOSs also predict seizure outcome or hospital course after hemispherectomy.

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Joyce Y. Wu

University of California

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Raman Sankar

National Taiwan University

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Meeryo Choe

University of California

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Noriko Salamon

University of California

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