Interictal heart rate patterns in partial seizure disorders: Difference between revisions
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Created page with "''Frysinger RC, Engel J, and Harper RM (1993) Interictal heart rate patterns in partial seizure disorders. Neurology 43:10 2136–9.'' '''[http://www.neurology.org/content/43..." |
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Frysinger RC, Engel J, and Harper RM (1993) Interictal heart rate patterns in partial seizure disorders. Neurology 43:10 2136–9. | |||
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http://www.neurology.org/content/43/10/2136.abstract | |||
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Epileptogenic mesial temporal damage may alter interictal autonomic patterning. Analysis of heart rate variability in 19 patients with complex partial seizures revealed cases of persistent, high-amplitude, 4 to 9 per minute fluctuations in heart rate during alert waking. This pattern was most pronounced in poor candidates for anterior temporal lobe resection (2/19). The 4 to 9 per minute heart-rate variability pattern may emerge following diffuse, extratemporal, or bilateral mesial temporal damage, which interferes with descending forebrain influences on cardiovascular regulation. | |||
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*Assessment of heart rate variability in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy that identified periods of fluctuation in heart rate during waking that lasted 4 to 9 minutes. | *Assessment of heart rate variability in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy that identified periods of fluctuation in heart rate during waking that lasted 4 to 9 minutes. | ||
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Latest revision as of 17:38, 17 June 2019
Frysinger RC, Engel J, and Harper RM (1993) Interictal heart rate patterns in partial seizure disorders. Neurology 43:10 2136–9.
Abstract: Epileptogenic mesial temporal damage may alter interictal autonomic patterning. Analysis of heart rate variability in 19 patients with complex partial seizures revealed cases of persistent, high-amplitude, 4 to 9 per minute fluctuations in heart rate during alert waking. This pattern was most pronounced in poor candidates for anterior temporal lobe resection (2/19). The 4 to 9 per minute heart-rate variability pattern may emerge following diffuse, extratemporal, or bilateral mesial temporal damage, which interferes with descending forebrain influences on cardiovascular regulation.
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- Assessment of heart rate variability in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy that identified periods of fluctuation in heart rate during waking that lasted 4 to 9 minutes.
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