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  1. 18-year old patient with anti-epileptic therapy and sudden cardiac death
  2. 294 medicolegal autopsies on epileptics: Cerebral findings
  3. A case of neurogenic pulmonary edema associated with epileptic seizure
  4. A case of seizure-related bradycardia and asystole
  5. A comparison of the efferents of the amygdala and the hippocampal formation in the rhesus monkey: I. Convergence in the entorhinal, prorhinal, and perirhinal cortices
  6. A correlation of autonomic and EEG components in temporal lobe epilepsy
  7. A nationwide survey of the extent of autopsy in sudden unexplained death in epilepsy
  8. A novel mouse model for sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP): Role of impaired adenosine clearance
  9. A population-based post mortem study of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy
  10. A prospective study on sudden unexpected death in epilepsy
  11. A reprassial of mortality after epilepsy surgery
  12. A review of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: Prediction of patients at risk
  13. Activation of limbic structures during CO2-stimulated breathing in awake man
  14. Adenosine: a potential mediator of seizure arrest and post-ictal refractoriness
  15. Adult hippocampal neurogenesis and sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: Reality or just an attractive history?
  16. After sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: Lessons learned and the road forward
  17. Age-specific peri-ictal electroclinical features of generalized tonic-clonic seizures and potential risk of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy SUDEP
  18. All pages
  19. Alteration of cardiac function in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy: Different roles of EEG-ECG monitoring and spectral analysis of RR variability
  20. Amygdala-stimulation-induced apnea is attention and nasal breathing dependent
  21. Amygdala and hippocampus are symptomatogenic zones for central apneic seizures
  22. Amygdala sclerosis in sudden and unexpected death in epilepsy
  23. Amygdaloid projections to the mesencephalon, pons and medulla oblongata in the cat
  24. An animal model for SUDEP: The questions shape the answers
  25. An electroclinical case-control study of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy
  26. An insufficient effect of lamotrigine leading to fatal seizures
  27. An observation of the effect of the electrical stimulation of the temporal lobes on blood pressure in man
  28. Anoxia-ischemia: A mechanism of seizure termination in ictal asystole
  29. Anoxic-epileptic seizures: observational study of epileptic seizures induced by syncopes
  30. Anticonvulsant drug effects on spontaneous thalamocortical rhythms in vitro: Phenytoin, carbamazepine, and phenobarbital
  31. Antiepileptic drug therapy and its management in sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: A case-control study
  32. Apnoea and bradycardia during epileptic seizures: Relation to sudden death in epilepsy
  33. Are geomagnetic disturbances a risk factor for the sudden unexplained death of epileptic children?
  34. Arrhythmia in heart and brain: KCNQ1 mutations link epilepsy and sudden unexplained death
  35. Ascending projection from the respiratory centre to mesencephalon and diencephalon
  36. Assessing the link between omega-3 fatty acids, cardiac arrest, and sudden unexpected death in epilepsy
  37. Association of prone position with sudden unexpected death in epilepsy
  38. Asystole induced by electrical stimulation of the left cingulate gyrus
  39. Asystole induced by partial seizures: A rare cause of syncope
  40. Asystolic Seizures
  41. Automated non-EEG based seizure detection: Do users have a say?
  42. Autonomic changes following generalized tonic clonic seizures: An analysis of adult and pediatric patients with epilepsy
  43. Autonomic dysfunction in epilepsy: characterization of autonomic cardiac neural discharge associated with pentylenetetrazol-induced epileptogenic activity
  44. Autonomic effects on stimulating rostral portion of cingulate gyri in man
  45. Autonomic epilepsy
  46. Baseline elevation and reduction in cardiac electrical instability assessed by quantitative T-wave alternans in patients with drug-resistant epilepsy treated with vagus nerve stimulation in the AspireSR E-36 trial
  47. Benefits of sunlight: Vitamin D deficiency might increase the risk of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy
  48. Bradyarrhythmias induced by antiepileptics increase frequency of epileptic seizures
  49. Bradycardia, an epileptic ictal manifestation
  50. Bradycardia and asystole induced by partial seizures: A case report and literature review
  51. Bradycardia and syncope as manifestations of partial epilepsy
  52. Bradycardia and tachycardia following electrical stimulation of the amygdaloid region in monkey
  53. Brain or heart-that is the question
  54. Brain seizes, heart ceases: a case of ictal asystole
  55. Breathing: rhythmicity, plasticity, chemosensitivity
  56. Breathing inhibited when seizures spread to the amygdala and upon amygdala stimulation
  57. CNS innervation of posterior cricoarytenoid muscles: A transneuronal labeling study
  58. CNS innervation of vagal preganglionic neurons controlling peripheral airways: a transneuronal labeling study using pseudorabies virus
  59. Can SCN1A mutations account for SUDEP?
  60. Can sudden unexplained death in epilepsy be prevented?
  61. Can technology help reduce risk of harm in patients with epilepsy?
  62. Capillary leak syndrome with pulmonary edema
  63. Carbamazepine affects autonomic cardiac control in patients with newly diagnosed epilepsy
  64. Carbamazepine and cardiac conduction disturbances
  65. Carbamazepine induced bradycardia – A problem in general or only in susceptible patients? A 24-h long-term electrocardiogram study
  66. Cardiac activity during epileptic seizures
  67. Cardiac and respiratory correlations with unit discharge in epileptic human temporal lobe
  68. Cardiac and respiratory correlations with unit discharge in human amygdala and hippocampus
  69. Cardiac and respiratory relationships with neural discharge in the anterior cingulate cortex during sleep-walking states
  70. Cardiac arrest due to partial epileptic seizures
  71. Cardiac arrhythmias and SUDEP--Commentary on Hindocha et al.
  72. Cardiac arrhythmias during or after epileptic seizures
  73. Cardiac arrhythmias in focal epilepsy: A prospective long-term study
  74. Cardiac arrhythmias in the differential diagnosis of epilepsy
  75. Cardiac arrhythmias of genetic origin are important contributors to sudden infant death syndrome
  76. Cardiac asystole and bradycardia as a manifestation of left temporal lobe complex partial seizure
  77. Cardiac asystole associated with epileptic seizures: A case report with simultaneous EEG and ECG
  78. Cardiac asystole in epilepsy: Clinical and neurophysiologic features
  79. Cardiac asystole in partial seizures
  80. Cardiac asystole masquerading as temporal lobe epilepsy
  81. Cardiac causes of sudden death: Virtual panel discussion of posed questions
  82. Cardiac causes of sudden unexpected death in children and their relationship to seizures and syncope: Genetic testing for cardiac electropathies
  83. Cardiac dysrhythmia associated with the immediate postictal state after maximal electroshock in freely moving rat
  84. Cardiac effects of seizures
  85. Cardiac manifestations of complex partial seizures
  86. Cardiac neural discharge and epileptogenic activity in the cat: An animal model for unexplained death
  87. Cardiac rhythm during temporal lobe seizures
  88. Cardiac side effects of phenytoin and carbamazepine. A dose-related phenomenon?
  89. Cardiogenic seizure with bradyarrhythmia: documentation of the mechanism during asystole
  90. Cardiogenic syncope in temporal lobe epileptic seizures
  91. Cardiopulmonary surveillance to prevent SUDEP
  92. Cardiopulmonary surveillance to prevent SUDEP – Authors’ reply
  93. Cardiorespiratory control during sleep
  94. Cardiorespiratory findings in sudden unexplained/unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP)
  95. Cardiovascular and respiratory relationships with neuronal discharge in the central nucleus of the amygdala during sleep-waking states
  96. Cardiovascular and respiratory responses to electrical and chemical stimulation of the hippocampus in anesthetized and awake rats
  97. Cardiovascular autonomic functions in well-controlled and intractable partial epilepsies
  98. Cardiovascular causes of loss of consciousness in patients with presumed epilepsy: a cause of the increased sudden death rate in people with epilepsy?
  99. Cardiovascular effects of human insular cortex stimulation
  100. Case-control study of SUDEP
  101. Case-control study of associated conditions at the time of death in patients with epilepsy
  102. Cases of diseases of the heart accompanied with pathological observations
  103. Cause-specific mortality in epilepsy: A cohort study of more than 9,000 patients once hospitalized for epilepsy
  104. Cause of death and predictors of mortality in a community-based cohort of people with epilepsy
  105. Causes of death in epilepsy patients who died in a Cuban psychiatric hospital
  106. Causes of death in institutionalized epileptics
  107. Causes of sudden unexpected deaths in young and middle-aged persons
  108. Central apnea and acute cardiac ischemia in a sheep model of epileptic sudden death
  109. Central cardio-autonomic disorganization in interictal states of epilepsy detected by phase space analysis
  110. Cerebral arrhythmia influencing cardiac rhythm: A case of ictal bradycardia
  111. Cerebral autoregulation improves in epilepsy patients after temporal lobe surgery
  112. Cerebral correlates of autonomic cardiovascular arousal: A functional neuroimaging investigation in humans
  113. Cerebral hemispheric lateralization in cardiac autonomic control
  114. Cerebrospinal fluid adenosine concentration and uncoupling of cerebral blood flow and oxidative metabolism after severe head injury in humans
  115. Certification of deaths attributable to epilepsy
  116. Cessation of the pulse during the onset of epileptic fits
  117. Changes in arrhythmia profile and heart rate variability during abrupt withdrawal of antiepileptic drugs. Implications for sudden death
  118. Changes in plasma catecholamines after tonic-clonic seizures
  119. Changes in respiratory-modulated neural activities, consistent with obstructive and central apnea, during fictive seizures in an in situ anaesthetized rat preparation
  120. Circadian variation in heart-rate variability in localization-related epilepsy
  121. Circulatory and respiratory changes induced by electrical stimulation of limbic system (visceral brain)
  122. Circulatory effects of cortical stimulation
  123. Circumstances of death in sudden death in epilepsy: interviews of bereaved relatives
  124. Clinical features of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy
  125. Clinical pharmacology: drugs as a benefit and/or risk in sudden unexpected death in epilepsy?
  126. Clinical spectrum of mutations in SCN1A gene: severe myoclonic epilepsy in infancy and related epilepsies
  127. Cohort study of incidence of sudden unexplained death in persons with seizure disorder treated with antiepileptic drugs in Saskatchewan, Canada
  128. Combined analysis of risk factors for SUDEP
  129. Community-based study of mortality in children with epilepsy
  130. Comparison of anti-epileptic drug levels in different cases of sudden death
  131. Comparison of antiepileptic drug levels in sudden unexpected deaths in epilepsy with deaths from other causes
  132. Comparison of the efferents of the amygdala and the hippocampal formation in the rhesus monkey: II. Reciprocal and non-reciprocal connections
  133. Complete atrio-ventricular conduction block during complex partial seizure
  134. Computerized seizure detection based on heart rate changes
  135. Coroner and medical examiner documentation of sudden unexplained deaths in epilepsy
  136. Coroners’ autopsy reporting of sudden unexplained death in epilepsy (SUDEP) in the UK
  137. Could sudden cardiac death in epilepsy be related to the occurrence of thalamic dysfunction or anatomic change?
  138. Could sudden death syndrome (SDS) in chickens (Gallus gallus) be a valid animal model for sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP)?
  139. Death in Unverricht-Lundborg disease
  140. Death in children with epilepsy: A population-based study
  141. Death in the shadows
  142. Deaths from epilepsy: What next?
  143. Decrease of sympathetic cardiovascular modulation after temporal lobe epilepsy surgery
  144. Decreased neuronal burst discharge near site of seizure onset in epileptic human temporal lobes
  145. Demystifying sudden unexplained death in epilepsy – Are we close?
  146. Detecting nocturnal convulsions: Efficacy of the MP5 monitor
  147. Development of cardiac innervation, ventricular fibrillation, and sudden infant death syndrome
  148. Diagnostic accuracy of audio-based seizure detection in patients with severe epilepsy and an intellectual disability
  149. Differential effects of right unilateral and bilateral ECT on heart rate
  150. Direct hypothalamo-autonomic connections
  151. Direct projections from the ventrolateral medulla oblongata to the limbic forebrain: Anterograde and retrograde tract-tracing studies in the rat
  152. Do alterations in inter-ictal heart rate variability predict sudden unexpected death in epilepsy?
  153. Do antiepileptic drugs play a role in sudden unexpected death in epilepsy?
  154. Does cardiac conduction pathology contribute to sudden unexpected death in epilepsy?
  155. Does epilepsy surgery really lower mortality?
  156. Does lateralized hemispheric control of cardiovascular activity exist? A Wada test study
  157. Does the lunar phase have an effect on sudden unexpected death in epilepsy?
  158. Dynamics of convulsive seizure termination and postictal generalized EEG suppression
  159. ECG abnormalities in epileptics
  160. ECG abnormalities in patients with epilepsy
  161. EEG and ECG in sudden unexplained death in epilepsy
  162. EKG abnormalities during partial seizures in refractory epilepsy
  163. EKG abnormalities in children and adolescents with symptomatic temporal lobe epilepsy
  164. Echo-planar functional MR imaging of epilepsy with concurrent EEG monitoring
  165. Effect of phenobarbital pretreatment on cardiac neural discharge and pentylenetetrazol-induced epileptogenic activity in the cat
  166. Effect of vagal nerve electrostimulation on the power spectrum of heart rate variability in man
  167. Effect upon blood pressure of electrical stimulation of tips of temporal lobes in man
  168. Effects of Seizures on Autonomic and Cardiovascular Function
  169. Effects of hypercapnia on hemodynamic, inotropic, lusitropic, and electrophysiologic indices in humans
  170. Effects of phenobarbital on cerebral blood flow during hypoxia
  171. Effects of seizure repetition on postictal and interictal neurocardiac regulation in the rat
  172. Effects of seizure severity and seizure repetition on postictal cardiac arrhythmia following maximal electroshock
  173. Effects of the antiepileptic drugs lamotrigine, topiramate and gabapentin on hERG potassium currents
  174. Effects of vagus nerve stimulation on cardiovascular regulation in patients with epilepsy
  175. Efficacy of naloxone in reducing postictal central respiratory dysfunction in patients with epilepsy: study protocol for a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial
  176. Electrocardiograph QT lengthening associated with epileptiform EEG discharges – A role in sudden unexplained death in epilepsy?
  177. Electrocardiographic accompaniments of temporal lobe epileptic seizures
  178. Electrocardiographic changes at the onset of epileptic seizures
  179. Electrocardiographic changes during electrographic seizures
  180. Electrocardiographic disorders associated to recent onset epilepsy
  181. Electrocardiography in epilepsy patients without cardiac symptoms
  182. Electrophysiologic assessment of autonomic function in epilepsy
  183. Electrophysiologic effects and clinical hazards of carbamazepine treatment for neurologic disorders in patients with abnormalities of the cardiac conduction system
  184. Electrophysiological evaluation of the sodium-channel blocker carbamazepine in healthy human subjects
  185. Entropy measures of heart rate variation in conscious dogs
  186. Epidemiology and classification of epilepsy: Gender comparisons
  187. Epilepsy, vagal nerve stimulation by the NCP system, all-cause mortality, and sudden, unexpected, unexplained death
  188. Epilepsy, vagal nerve stimulation by the NCP system, mortality, and sudden, unexpected, unexplained death
  189. Epilepsy: A ‘going ape’ model for SUDEP?
  190. Epilepsy and sudden death
  191. Epilepsy and sudden death: A personal view
  192. Epilepsy and sudden death: notes from George Washington's diaries on the illness and death of Martha Parke-Custis (1756-1773)
  193. Epilepsy and sudden death: personal reflections and call for global action
  194. Epilepsy and the long QT syndrome: is there a link? – Commentary on Hindocha et al.
  195. Epilepsy in the elderly: Life expectancy and causes of death
  196. Epileptic Seizure Prediction Based on Multivariate Statistical Process Control of Heart Rate Variability Features
  197. Epileptic cardiac arrhythmia: sinoatrial arrest in two patients: a potential cause of sudden death in epilepsy?
  198. Epileptic seizure-induced hypoxemia in infants with apparent life-threatening events
  199. Epileptic sudden death: Animal models
  200. Equivocal significance of post-ictal generalized EEG suppression as a marker of SUDEP risk
  201. Errors and misconceptions in ECG measurement used for the detection of drug induced QT interval prolongation
  202. Estimating excess winter mortality in England and Wales
  203. Evaluation of sudden death in epilepsy
  204. Evidence for limbic system activation during CO2-stimulated breathing in man
  205. Evidence supporting a role of serotonin in modulation of sudden death induced by seizures in DBA/2 mice
  206. Evidence supporting role of serotonin in modulation of sudden death induced by seizures in DBA/2 Mice
  207. Excess mortality and sudden unexpected death in epilepsy
  208. Exome-based analysis of cardiac arrhythmia, respiratory control and epilepsy genes in sudden unexpected death in epilepsy
  209. FMRI responses to cold pressor challenges in control and obstructive sleep apnea subjects
  210. Feature selection methods for accelerometry-based seizure detection in children
  211. Finding the missing link between ictal bradyarrhythmia, ictal asystole, and sudden unexpected death in epilepsy
  212. Forensic considerations in sudden unexpected death in epilepsy
  213. From mystery to prevention: Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy, time to move on
  214. From unwitnessed fatality to witnessed rescue: Nonpharmacologic interventions in sudden unexpected death in epilepsy
  215. From unwitnessed fatality to witnessed rescue: Pharmacologic intervention in sudden unexpected death in epilepsy
  216. Functional assessment of heart rate variability: physiological basis and practical applications
  217. Genetic screening for SUDEP? – Commentary on Hindocha et al.
  218. Genome-wide Polygenic Burden of Rare Deleterious Variants in Sudden Unexpected Death in Epilepsy
  219. Hard Choices: Whether and How to Address SUDEP With Epileptic Patients
  220. Heart rate and EKG changes in 102 seizures: Analysis of influencing factors
  221. Heart rate changes and ECG abnormalities during epileptic seizures: Prevalence and definition of an objective clinical sign
  222. Heart rate changes during partial seizures: a study amongst Singaporean patients
  223. Heart rate differences between right and left unilateral electroconvulsive therapy
  224. Heart rate does not decrease after right hemispheric amobarbital injection
  225. Heart rate variability: Standards of measurement, physiological interpretation and clinical use
  226. Heart rate variability during sleep in children with partial epilepsy
  227. Heart rate variability in children with refractory generalized epilepsy
  228. Heart rate variability in patients with epilepsy
  229. Heart rate variability in patients with frontal lobe epilepsy
  230. Heart rate variability in patients with untreated epilepsy
  231. Hemispheric influence on autonomic modulation and baroreflex sensitivity
  232. Hippocampal activity during transient respiratory events in the freely behaving cat
  233. Hippocampal input to a “visceral motor” corticobulbar pathway: An anatomical and electrophysiological study in the rat
  234. Hypoxaemia and cardiorespiratory changes during epileptic seizures in young children
  235. Ictal ECG changes in temporal lobe epilepsy
  236. Ictal apnea linked to contralateral spread of temporal lobe seizures: Intracranial EEG recordings in refractory temporal lobe epilepsy
  237. Ictal apnea of epileptic origin
  238. Ictal asystole: A benign condition?
  239. Ictal asystole in temporal lobe epilepsy before and after pacemaker implantation
  240. Ictal asystole with convulsive syncope mimicking secondary generalisation: A depth electrode study
  241. Ictal asystole – Late manifestation of partial epilepsy and importance of cardiac pacemaker
  242. Ictal bradycardia followed by cardiac asystole: A case report
  243. Ictal bradycardia in a patient with a hypothalamic hamartoma: A stereo-EEG study
  244. Ictal bradycardia in partial epileptic seizures: Autonomic investigation in three cases and literature review
  245. Ictal changes in parasympathetic tone: Prediction of postictal oxygen desaturation
  246. Ictal hypoventilation contributes to cardiac arrhythmia and SUDEP: report on two deaths in video-EEG-monitored patients
  247. Ictal hypoventilation contributes to cardiac arrhythmia and sudep: Report on two deaths in video-eeg-monitored patients
  248. Ictal hypoxemia in localization-related epilepsy: Analysis of incidence, severity and risk factors
  249. Ictal tachycardia: Its discriminating potential between temporal and extratemporal seizure foci
  250. Ictal tachycardia during temporal lobe seizures
  251. Identification of a possible pathogenic link between congenital long QT syndrome and epilepsy
  252. Idiopathic cardiac asystole presenting as an intractable adult onset partial seizure disorder
  253. Impact of periictal interventions on respiratory dysfunction, postictal EEG suppression, and postictal immobility
  254. Impact of periictal nurse interventions on postictal generalized EEG suppression in generalized convulsive seizures
  255. Impaired baroreflex function in temporal lobe epilepsy
  256. Incidence and mechanisms of cardiorespiratory arrests in epilepsy monitoring units (MORTEMUS): a retrospective study
  257. Incidence and risk factors in sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: A prospective cohort study
  258. Incidence and significance of periictal apnea in epileptic seizures
  259. Incidence of sudden unexpected death in an adult outpatient cohort with epilepsy at a tertiary referral centre
  260. Increased QT dispersion in epileptic children
  261. Increased pulmonary vascular permeability follows intracranial hypertension in sheep
  262. Infant sleeping position and the sudden infant death syndrome: systematic review of observational studies and historical review of recommendations from 1940 to 2002
  263. Information on sudden deaths from epilepsy
  264. Inhibition of adenosine metabolism induces changes in post-ictal depression, respiration, and mortality in genetically epilepsy prone rats
  265. Insights from the study of heart rate variability
  266. Interactions between respiration and circulation
  267. Interictal autonomic nervous system function in patients with epilepsy
  268. Interictal cardiac autonomic dysfunction in temporal lobe epilepsy demonstrated by 123I-metaiodobenzylguanidine-SPECT
  269. Interictal heart rate patterns in partial seizure disorders
  270. Interspike intervals during interictal periods in human temporal lobe epilepsy
  271. Is cold the new hot in sudden unexpected death in epilepsy? Effect of low temperature on heart rate of rats with epilepsy
  272. Is geomagnetic activity a risk factor for sudden unexplained death in epilepsies?
  273. Is sudden unexplained death in adult epileptic patients associated with geomagnetic disturbances at the day of death or the 4 days before?
  274. Is there progress in the autopsy diagnosis of sudden unexpected death in adults?
  275. Is there something special about cardiovascular abnormalities and sudden unexpected death in epilepsy among patients with chronic renal insufficiency in regular hemodialysis program?
  276. Ischemic and anoxic dissolution of the supramedullary control of respiration
  277. Keeping patients with epilepsy safe: a surmountable challenge?
  278. Kindled seizures activate both branches of the autonomic nervous system
  279. Kindled seizures elevate blood pressure and induce cardiac arrhythmias
  280. Kv1.1 potassium channel deficiency reveals brain-driven cardiac dysfunction as a candidate mechanism for sudden unexplained death in epilepsy
  281. Lamotrigine in idiopathic epilepsy – Increased risk of cardiac death
  282. Lamotrigine in idiopathic epilepsy – Increased risk of cardiac death?
  283. Laryngospasm, central and obstructive apnea during seizures: Defining pathophysiology for sudden death in a rat model
  284. Lateralized and widespread brain activation during transient blood pressure elevation revealed by magnetic resonance imaging
  285. Lengthening of corrected QT during epileptic seizures
  286. Levels of integration of respiratory patterns
  287. Life expectancy in epilepsy
  288. Limbic forebrain and midbrain modulation and phase-switching of expiratory neurons
  289. Limbic system modulation of respiratory neurones
  290. Living with epileptic seizures
  291. Long-duration self-sustained epileptiform activity in the hippocampal-parahippocampal slice: A model of status epilepticus
  292. Long-term mortality in childhood-onset epilepsy
  293. Long-term survival after epilepsy surgery compared with matched epilepsy controls and the general population
  294. Many people with epilepsy want to know more: a qualitative study
  295. Mechanisms of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: the pathway to prevention
  296. Medical risks in epilepsy: a review with focus on physical injuries, mortality, traffic accidents and their prevention
  297. Microglia PACAP and glutamate: Friends or foes in seizure-induced autonomic dysfunction and SUDEP?
  298. Mortality from epilepsy. International patterns and changes over time
  299. Mortality from epilepsy: Results from a prospective population-based study
  300. Mortality from ischaemic heart disease among patients using anticonvulsive drugs: A case-control study
  301. Mortality in Dravet Syndrome
  302. Mortality in a population-based cohort of epilepsy surgery patients
  303. Mortality in adults with newly diagnosed and chronic epilepsy: A retrospective comparative study
  304. Mortality in antiepileptic drug development programs
  305. Mortality in captive baboons with seizures: A new model for SUDEP?
  306. Mortality in children with epilepsy. A clinical prospective study
  307. Mortality in epilepsy
  308. Mortality in epilepsy in the first 11 to 14 years after diagnosis: multivariate analysis of a long-term, prospective, population-based cohort
  309. Mortality in epilepsy in the west of Ireland: A 10-year review
  310. Mortality in patients with epilepsy: A study of patients in long term residential care
  311. Multiple serotonergic brainstem abnormalities in sudden infant death syndrome
  312. N-3 fatty acids (fish oil) for epilepsy, cardiac risk factors, and risk of SUDEP: clues from a pilot, double-blind, exploratory study
  313. National General Practice Study of Epilepsy and Epileptic Seizures: Objectives and study methodology of the largest reported prospective cohort study of epilepsy
  314. Neural control of heart rate is an arrhythmia risk modifier in long QT syndrome
  315. Neural mechanisms in cardiac arrhythmias associated with epileptogenic activity: the effect of phenobarbital in the cat
  316. Neurocardiac responses to vagoafferent electrostimulation in humans
  317. Neurogenic pulmonary edema in unexpected, unexplained death of epileptic patients
  318. Neuronal synchrony in relation to burst discharge in epileptic human temporal lobes
  319. New SCN5A mutation in a SUDEP victim with idiopathic epilepsy
  320. No apparent effect of surgery for temporal lobe epilepsy on heart rate variability
  321. Non-EEG based ambulatory seizure detection designed for home use: What is available and how will it influence epilepsy care?
  322. Non-EEG seizure detection systems and potential SUDEP prevention: State of the art: Review and update
  323. Non-invasive assessment of cardioregulatory autonomic functions in children with epilepsy
  324. Nonadherence to antiepileptic drugs and increased mortality: findings from the RANSOM study
  325. Nonseizure SUDEP: Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy without preceding epileptic seizures
  326. Novel SCN5A mutation (Q55X) associated with age-dependent expression of Brugada syndrome presenting as neurally mediated syncope
  327. Observations on some cases of permanently slow pulse
  328. Obstructive apnea due to laryngospasm links ictal to postictal events in SUDEP cases and offers practical biomarkers for review of past cases and prevention of new ones
  329. On the modes of death in epilepsy
  330. Outcome of epilepsy surgery correlates with sympathetic modulation and neuroimaging of the heart
  331. Outcomes in 248 patients who had diagnostic evaluations for epilepsy surgery
  332. Oxygen desaturations triggered by partial seizures: Implications for cardiopulmonary instability in epilepsy
  333. Oxygenation prevents sudden death in seizure-prone mice
  334. Parental and physician beliefs regarding the provision and content of written sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) information
  335. Paroxysmal autonomic dysfunction, epileptogenic activity and sudden death
  336. Partial epilepsy presenting as episodic dyspnea: A specific network involved in limbic seizure propagation
  337. Partial epileptic seizures of different origin variably affect cardiac rhythm
  338. Partial seizures manifesting as apnea only in an adult
  339. Partial seizures presenting as life-threatening apnea
  340. Partial seizures with apnea and bradycardia
  341. Pathogenesis of neurogenic pulmonary oedema
  342. Pathologic cardiac repolarization in pharmacoresistant epilepsy and its potential role in sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: a case-control study
  343. Patient-centered design criteria for wearable seizure detection devices
  344. Patients with epilepsy who die suddenly do not always have cardiac disease
  345. Patients with epilepsy who die suddenly have cardiac disease
  346. Periodic respiratory pattern occurring in conjunction with eye movements during sleep
  347. Persistence of impaired autoregulation of cerebral blood flow in the postictal period in piglets
  348. Phase-switching of respiration induced by central gray and hippocampal stimulation in the cat
  349. Phenytoin and phenobarbital inhibit human HERG potassium channels
  350. Physical activity in sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: Much more than a simple sport
  351. Physiological evidence concerning importance of the amygdaloid nuclear region in the integration of circulatory function and emotion in man
  352. Physiological time-series analysis: what does regularity quantify?
  353. Population-based study of the incidence of sudden unexplained death in epilepsy
  354. Post-mortem findings of cardiac lesions in epileptics: a preliminary report
  355. Post-mortem review and genetic analysis of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy cases
  356. Postictal Generalized EEG Suppression and SUDEP: A Review
  357. Postictal apnea as an important mechanism for SUDEP: A near-SUDEP with continuous EEG-ECG-EMG recording
  358. Postictal breathing pattern distinguishes epileptic from nonepileptic convulsive seizures
  359. Postictal central apnea as a cause of SUDEP: Evidence from near-SUDEP incident
  360. Postictal generalized EEG suppression: an inconsistent finding in people with multiple seizures
  361. Postictal generalized EEG suppression and respiratory dysfunction following generalized tonic–clonic seizures in sleep and wakefulness
  362. Postictal generalized EEG suppression is linked to seizure-associated respiratory dysfunction but not postictal apnea
  363. Postictal generalized electroencephalographic suppression is associated with generalized seizures
  364. Postictal heart rate oscillations in partial epilepsy
  365. Postictal immobility and generalized EEG suppression are associated with the severity of respiratory dysfunction
  366. Postictal increase in T-wave alternans after generalized tonic–clonic seizures
  367. Postmortem changes in blood concentrations of phenytoin and carbamazepine: An experimental study
  368. Potentially high-risk cardiac arrhythmias with focal to bilateral tonic–clonic seizures and generalized tonic–clonic seizures are associated with the duration of periictal hypoxemia
  369. Power spectrum analysis of heart rate variability in children with epilepsy
  370. Practice guideline summary: Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy incidence rates and risk factors
  371. Premature deaths in persons with seizure disorders – Subtherapeutic levels of anticonvulsant drugs in postmortem blood specimens
  372. Preoperative heart rate variability in relation to surgery outcome in refractory epilepsy
  373. Present status of the relationship of brain structures to the circulation and emotional expression in man
  374. Prevalence of cardiac conduction disturbances during carbamazepine treatment: Preliminary data
  375. Preventing tomorrow’s sudden cardiac death in epilepsy today: What should physicians know about this?
  376. Prevention of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy:A realistic goal?
  377. Profiles of instant heart rate during partial seizures
  378. Projections to areas of the nucleus tractus solitarii related to circulatory and respiratory responses in cats
  379. Prolactin levels in sudden unexpected death in epilepsy
  380. Prolongation of the QT interval and the sudden infant death syndrome
  381. Prolonged QT syndrome presenting as epilepsy
  382. Psychoactive agents, seizure production, and sudden death in epilepsy
  383. Pulmonary afferent and central influences on respiratory phase-switching in the cat
  384. QT dispersion
  385. Quantitative analysis of surface electromyography: Biomarkers for convulsive seizures
  386. Recognizing and preventing epilepsy-related mortality: A call for action
  387. Recurring discharge patterns in multiple spike trains
  388. Reducing mortality: An important aim of epilepsy management
  389. Regional brain activation in humans during respiratory and blood pressure challenges
  390. Relation between ictal asystole and cardiac sympathetic dysfunction shown by MIBG-SPECT
  391. Relationships between hippocampal activity and breathing patterns
  392. Report of the American Epilepsy Society and the Epilepsy Foundation joint task force on sudden unexplained death in epilepsy
  393. Respiratory Pathophysiology With Seizures and Implications for Sudden Unexpected Death in Epilepsy
  394. Respiratory and vascular responses in monkeys from temporal pole, insula, orbital surface and cingulate gyrus; a preliminary report
  395. Respiratory arrest from seizure discharges in the limbic system
  396. Respiratory changes with seizures in localization-related epilepsy: Analysis of periictal hypercapnia and airflow patterns
  397. Respiratory modulation of neuronal discharge in the central nucleus of the amygdala during sleep and waking states
  398. Respiratory responses to stimulation of temporal pole, insula, and hippocampal and limbic gyri in man
  399. Review of autonomic dysfunction, cardiac arrhythmias, and epileptogenic activity
  400. Review of the legal obligations of the doctor to discuss Sudden Unexplained Death in Epilepsy (SUDEP) – A cohort controlled comparative cross-matched study in an outpatient epilepsy clinic
  401. Right ventromedial prefrontal lesions result in paradoxical cardiovascular activation with emotional stimuli
  402. Risk Assessment for Sudden Deathin Epilepsy: The SUDEP-7 Inventory
  403. Risk factors for sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: A case-control study
  404. Risk factors for sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: A controlled prospective study based on coroners cases
  405. Risk factors in sudden death in epilepsy (SUDEP): The quest for mechanisms
  406. Risk factors of postictal generalized EEG suppression in generalized convulsive seizures
  407. Risk of Sudden unexpected death in patients given adjunctive epilepsy treatment for refractory seizures: a meta-analysis of placebo-controlled trials
  408. Rostral brain regions contributing to respiratory control
  409. SSRI are associated with reduced severity of ictal hypoxemia in medically refractory partial epilepsy
  410. SUDEP: Overview of definitions and review of incidence data
  411. SUDEP: The death of nihilism
  412. SUDEP: Time for prevention—evidence and clinical translation. Proceedings from the Epilepsy Research UK 2014 Expert Workshop
  413. SUDEP: To discuss or not? Recommendations from bereaved relatives.
  414. SUDEP: What do adult patients want to know?
  415. SUDEP: what do parents want to know?
  416. SUDEP in the Netherlands: A retrospective study in a tertiary referral center
  417. SUDEP – Whether to tell and when
  418. Seasonality as a risk factor for sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: A study in a large cohort
  419. Seizure-related injuries are underreported in pharmacoresistant localization-related epilepsy
  420. Seizure control and mortality in epilepsy
  421. Seizure related autonomic changes in children
  422. Seizures and brain regulatory systems: consciousness, sleep, and autonomic systems
  423. Selective paralysis of voluntary but not limbically influenced automatic respiration
  424. Sensory, motor and autonomic effects of mesial temporal stimulation in man
  425. Severe myoclonic epilepsy in infancy: Dravet syndrome
  426. Severe postictal laryngospasm as a potential mechanism for sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: A near-miss in an EMU
  427. Severe pulmonary congestion in a near miss at the first seizure: Further evidence for respiratory dysfunction in sudden unexpected death in epilepsy
  428. Short QTc in epilepsy patients without cardiac symptoms
  429. Should all patients be told about sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP)? Pros and Cons
  430. Should patients or their families be told of the risk of Sudden Unexplained Death in Epilepsy?
  431. Sino-auricular heart block as an epileptic manifestation: A case report
  432. Sinus arrest in epilepsy
  433. Sinus node recovery time assessment revisited: Role of pharmacologic blockade of the autonomic nervous system
  434. Sleep states attenuate the pressor response to central amygdala stimulation
  435. Some autonomic concomitants of ictal automatism; A study of temporal lobe attack
  436. Some autonomic concomitants of ictal automatism; A study of temporal lobe attacks
  437. Speculations on neurogenic pulmonary edema (NPE)
  438. Spreading depolarization in the brainstem mediates sudden cardiorespiratory arrest in mouse SUDEP models
  439. State-dependent alteration of respiratory cycle timing by stimulation of the central nucleus of the amygdala
  440. Stertorous breathing is a reliably identified sign that helps in the differentiation of epileptic from psychogenic non-epileptic convulsions: An audit
  441. Stiripentol in severe myoclonic epilepsy in infancy: a randomised placebo-controlled syndrome-dedicated trial. STICLO study group
  442. Stress and sudden death
  443. Sudden and unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP): evidence of acute neuronal injury using HSP-70 and c-Jun immunohistochemistry
  444. Sudden and unexpected natural death in childhood and adolescence
  445. Sudden cardiac arrest in people with epilepsy in the community: Circumstances and risk factors
  446. Sudden death, febrile seizures, and hippocampal maldevelopment in toddlers: A new entity
  447. Sudden death and epilepsy
  448. Sudden death from hypoventilation during epileptic seizures
  449. Sudden death in epilepsy. A comprehensive review of the literature and proposed mechanisms
  450. Sudden death in epilepsy: A study of incidence in a young cohort with epilepsy and learning difficulty
  451. Sudden death in epilepsy: A wake-up call for management
  452. Sudden death in epilepsy: An avoidable outcome?
  453. Sudden death in epilepsy: An experimental animal model
  454. Sudden death in epilepsy recorded in ambulatory EEG
  455. Sudden death in epileptic rats exposed to nocturnal magnetic fields that simulate the shape and the intensity of sudden changes in geomagnetic activity: An experiment in response to Schnabel, Beblo and May
  456. Sudden death in toddlers associated with developmental abnormalities of the hippocampus: a report of five cases
  457. Sudden epilepsy deaths and the forensic pathologist
  458. Sudden unexpected, unexplained death in epilepsy autopsied patients
  459. Sudden unexpected death: a rare event in a large community based prospective cohort with newly diagnosed epilepsy and high remission rates
  460. Sudden unexpected death associated with seizures: Analysis of 66 cases
  461. Sudden unexpected death in a mouse model of Dravet syndrome
  462. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy. Risk factors, possible 225 mechanisms and prevention: A reappraisal
  463. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: A local audit
  464. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: A retrospective study
  465. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: A search for risk factors
  466. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: Current knowledge and future directions
  467. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: Evidence-based analysis of incidence and risk factors
  468. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: Identifying risk and preventing mortality
  469. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: Impact, mechanisms, and prevention
  470. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: Impact on clinical practice
  471. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: Is carbamazepine implicated?
  472. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: Knowledge and experience among US and Canadian neurologists
  473. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: Risk factors and potential pathomechanisms
  474. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: Terminology and definitions
  475. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: a retrospective study
  476. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: a review of incidence and risk factors
  477. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: a series from an epilepsy surgery program and speculation on the relationship to sudden cardiac death
  478. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: a series of witnessed deaths
  479. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: assessing the public health burden
  480. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: epidemiology, mechanisms, and prevention
  481. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: is death by seizures a cardiac disease?
  482. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: people with nocturnal seizures may be at highest risk
  483. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (Johnston, Smith)
  484. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (Lhatoo, Langan, Sander)
  485. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (Lhatoo, Sander)
  486. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP): A clinical perspective and a search for risk factors
  487. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP): Don’t ask, don’t tell?
  488. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP): Risk factors and case control studies
  489. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP): Update and reflections
  490. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy genetics: Molecular diagnostics and prevention
  491. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy in Victoria
  492. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy in adults with mental retardation
  493. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy in children and adolescents
  494. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy patients: Risk factors. A systematic review
  495. Sudden unexpected death in epileptics following sudden, intense, increases in geomagnetic activity: Prevalence of effect and potential mechanisms
  496. Sudden unexpected death in people with epilepsy: A pediatric perspective
  497. Sudden unexpected death in young adults including four cases of SADS: A 10-year review from the west of Ireland
  498. Sudden unexpected death of epileptic patient due to cardiac arrhythmia after seizure
  499. Sudden unexpected deaths in epilepsy – Where are we now?
  500. Sudden unexplained death among subjects with refractory epilepsy

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