gary mathern | University of California, Los Angeles (original) (raw)

Papers by gary mathern

Research paper thumbnail of Pediatric Cortical Dysplasia: Correlations between Neuroimaging, Electrophysiology and Location of Cytomegalic Neurons and Balloon Cells and Glutamate/GABA Synaptic Circuits

Developmental Neuroscience, 2005

Research paper thumbnail of Severe seizures in young children are associated with hippocampal neuron losses and aberrant mossy fiber sprouting during fascia dentata postnatal development

Epilepsy Research Supplement, Feb 1, 1996

Research paper thumbnail of Utility of ictal SPECT in temporal lobe epilepsy with hippocampal atrophy: a randomized trial

Research paper thumbnail of Pediatric Epilepsy and Epilepsy Surgery

Research paper thumbnail of Novel variant of cortical dysplasia in two cases of infantile intractable epilepsy

The Faseb Journal, Mar 1, 2008

Research paper thumbnail of DTI of tuber and perituberal tissue can predict epileptogenicity in tuberous sclerosis complex

Neurology, Jan 6, 2015

To evaluate whether diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) can predict epileptogenic tubers by measuring ... more To evaluate whether diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) can predict epileptogenic tubers by measuring apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC), fractional anisotropy, axial diffusivity, and radial diffusivity in both tubers and perituberal tissue in pediatric patients with tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) undergoing epilepsy surgery. We retrospectively selected 23 consecutive patients (aged 0.4-19.6 years, mean age of 5.2; 13 female, 10 male) who underwent presurgical DTI and subsequent surgical resection between 2004 and 2013 from the University of California-Los Angeles TSC Clinic. We evaluated presurgical examinations including video-EEG, brain MRI, (18)F-fluorodeoxyglucose-PET, magnetic source imaging, and intraoperative electrocorticography for determining epileptogenic tubers. A total of 545 tubers, 33 epileptogenic and 512 nonepileptogenic, were identified. Two observers generated the regions of interest (ROIs) of tubers (ROI(tuber)), the 4-mm-thick ring-shaped ROIs surrounding the tu...

Research paper thumbnail of An AKT3-FOXG1-reelin network underlies defective migration in human focal malformations of cortical development

Nature medicine, Jan 2, 2015

Focal malformations of cortical development (FMCDs) account for the majority of drug-resistant pe... more Focal malformations of cortical development (FMCDs) account for the majority of drug-resistant pediatric epilepsy. Postzygotic somatic mutations activating the phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate-3-kinase (PI3K)-protein kinase B (AKT)-mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathway are found in a wide range of brain diseases, including FMCDs. It remains unclear how a mutation in a small fraction of cells disrupts the architecture of the entire hemisphere. Within human FMCD-affected brain, we found that cells showing activation of the PI3K-AKT-mTOR pathway were enriched for the AKT3(E17K) mutation. Introducing the FMCD-causing mutation into mouse brain resulted in electrographic seizures and impaired hemispheric architecture. Mutation-expressing neural progenitors showed misexpression of reelin, which led to a non-cell autonomous migration defect in neighboring cells, due at least in part to derepression of reelin transcription in a manner dependent on the forkhead box (FOX) transcrip...

Research paper thumbnail of Topographical Distribution of Epileptogenic Tubers in Patients With Tuberous Sclerosis Complex

Journal of child neurology, Jan 15, 2015

Tuberous sclerosis complex is a multisystem genetic syndrome often affecting the central nervous ... more Tuberous sclerosis complex is a multisystem genetic syndrome often affecting the central nervous system. The purpose of the current study was to identify topographical patterns in the distribution specific to epileptogenic (n = 37) and nonepileptogenic (n = 544) tubers throughout the brain for a cohort of 23 tuberous sclerosis complex patients with a history of seizures. Tubers localized to the inferior parietal lobes, middle frontal lobes, middle temporal lobes, or central sulcus regions were associated with a high frequency of epileptogenic tubers. Epileptogenic tubers occurred statistically more frequently within the inferior parietal lobe and within the central sulcus region in children younger than 1 or between 1 and 3 years old, respectively. Results imply seizure activity in tuberous sclerosis complex patients can be associated with the location of cortical tubers.

Research paper thumbnail of PEDIATRIC EPILEPSY | Animal Models of Infant-Onset Epileptic Encephalopathy

Encyclopedia of Basic Epilepsy Research, 2009

Research paper thumbnail of Evidence for the involvement of gamma delta T cells in the immune response in Rasmussen encephalitis

Journal of neuroinflammation, 2015

Rasmussen encephalitis (RE) is a rare neuroinflammatory disease characterized by intractable seiz... more Rasmussen encephalitis (RE) is a rare neuroinflammatory disease characterized by intractable seizures and progressive atrophy on one side of the cerebrum. Perivascular cuffing and clusters of T cells in the affected cortical hemisphere are indicative of an active cellular immune response. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) and brain-infiltrating lymphocytes (BILs) were isolated from 20 RE surgery specimens by standard methods, and CD3(+) T cell populations were analyzed by flow cytometry. Gamma delta T cell receptor spectratyping was carried out by nested PCR of reversed transcribed RNA extracted from RE brain tissue, followed by high resolution capillary electrophoresis. A MiSeq DNA sequencing platform was used to sequence the third complementarity determining region (CDR3) of δ1 chains. CD3(+) BILs from all of the RE brain specimens comprised both αβ and γδ T cells. The median αβ:γδ ratio was 1.9 (range 0.58-5.2) compared with a median ratio of 7.7 (range 2.7-40.8) in peri...

Research paper thumbnail of Interview with Matthew Diamond, 2014 Epilepsia prize winner

Research paper thumbnail of A journey around the world": Parent narratives of the journey to pediatric resective epilepsy surgery and beyond

Epilepsia, Jan 20, 2015

Although shorter time to pediatric resective epilepsy surgery is strongly associated with greater... more Although shorter time to pediatric resective epilepsy surgery is strongly associated with greater disease severity, other nonclinical diagnostic and sociodemographic factors also play a role. We aimed to examine parent-reported barriers to timely receipt of pediatric epilepsy surgery. We conducted 37 interviews of parents of children who previously had resective epilepsy surgery at University of California Los Angeles (UCLA; 2006-2011). Interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed, and systematically coded using thematic analysis by two independent coders, and subsequently checked for agreement. Clinical data, including "time to surgery" (age of epilepsy onset to surgery) were abstracted from medical records. The mean time to surgery was 5.3 years (standard deviation [SD] 3.8); surgery types included 32% hemispherectomy, 43% lobar/focal, and 24% multilobar. At surgery, parents were on average 38.4 years (SD 6.6) and children were on average 8.2 years (SD 4.7). The more ardu...

Research paper thumbnail of From the editors: Global awareness and International Epilepsy Day

Research paper thumbnail of Fevers and abnormal blood and cerebrospinal fluid studies after pediatric cerebral hemispherectomy: impact of etiology and age at surgery

Journal of neurosurgery. Pediatrics, 2013

The object of this study was to determine if etiology and age at surgery were linked with fevers ... more The object of this study was to determine if etiology and age at surgery were linked with fevers and altered white blood cell and CSF laboratory values after cerebral hemispherectomy. Seizure etiologies (n = 76) were classified into hemimegalencephaly (HME), cortical dysplasia (CD), infarcts (stroke), Rasmussen encephalitis (RE), history of infections, and Sturge-Weber syndrome (SWS) and were compared with clinical variables, maximum daily temperature (Tmax), and blood and CSF studies through Day 12 posthemispherectomy. The Tmax on Days 2-4 and 9-12 postsurgery were higher for HME and RE cases than for stroke cases. Patients with RE showed positive correlations, whereas those with SWS had negative correlations between Tmax and age at surgery. Blood WBC counts on postsurgery Days 3, 6, and 9-12 were higher in the HME and CD cases than in the stroke and RE cases. The percentage of blood polymorphonuclear cells (%bloodPMNs) was higher in the RE cases than in the HME, CD, and SWS cases....

Research paper thumbnail of Epilepsy neurosurgery in children

Handbook of clinical neurology, 2012

Because epilepsy in children can lead to untoward developmental consequences, the key notion is t... more Because epilepsy in children can lead to untoward developmental consequences, the key notion is that children with therapy-resistant epilepsy should be diagnosed early and referred to a pediatric epilepsy center so that they may receive a comprehensive evaluation by an interdisciplinary team experienced in treating this disorder. The diagnosis of therapy-resistant epilepsy should be entertained after the child has failed two antiepileptic drugs. Of all children diagnosed with treatment-resistant epilepsy, up to 33% may be eligible for ...

Research paper thumbnail of From the editors: The discrepancy between accumulative incidence and lifetime prevalence of epilepsy

Research paper thumbnail of From the editors : Introducing Epilepsia's Controversy in Epilepsy series

Research paper thumbnail of In contrast to kindled seizures, the frequency of spontaneous epilepsy in the limbic status model correlates with greater aberrant fascia dentata excitatory and inhibitory axon sprouting, and increased staining for N-methyl-D-aspartate, AMPA and GABA(A) receptors

Neuroscience, 1997

This study determined whether there were differences in hippocampal neuron loss and synaptic plas... more This study determined whether there were differences in hippocampal neuron loss and synaptic plasticity by comparing rats with spontaneous epilepsy after limbic status epilepticus and animals with a similar frequency of kindled seizures. At the University of Virginia, Sprague-Dawley rats were implanted with bilateral ventral hippocampal electrodes and treated as follows; no stimulation (electrode controls; n=5): hippocampal stimulation without status (stimulation controls; n=5); and limbic status from continuous hippocampal stimulation (n=12). The limbic status group were electrographically monitored for a minimum of four weeks. Four rats had no recorded chronic seizures (status controls), and all three control groups showed no differences in hippocampal pathology and were therefore incorporated into a single group (controls). Eight limbic status animals eventually developed chronic epilepsy (spontaneous seizures) and an additional eight rats were kindled to a similar number and fre...

Research paper thumbnail of Cannabidiol and medical marijuana for the treatment of epilepsy

Research paper thumbnail of Hippocampal neuron damage in human epilepsy: Meyer's hypothesis revisited

Progress in brain research, 2002

Whether hippocampal neuron loss and/or hippocampal sclerosis is the 'cause' or 'conse... more Whether hippocampal neuron loss and/or hippocampal sclerosis is the 'cause' or 'consequence' of seizures has been a fundamental question in human epilepsy studies for over a century. To address this question, this study examined hippocampal specimens from temporal lobe epilepsy patients (TLE; n = 572) and those with extra-temporal seizures and pathologies (n = 73) for qualitative signs of hippocampal sclerosis and quantitative neuron loss using cell counting techniques. Patients were additionally classified based on pathological substrate, and history of an initial precipitating injury (IPI). Results showed that: (1) Hippocampal sclerosis was strongly linked with an IPI in both TLE and extra-temporal seizure patients. (2) In TLE cases, IPIs showed an early age preference and often involved seizures, but IPIs were not age dependent and older IPI cases showed sclerosis that was indistinguishable from younger IPI patients. (3) In TLE patients, longer seizure durations w...

Research paper thumbnail of Pediatric Cortical Dysplasia: Correlations between Neuroimaging, Electrophysiology and Location of Cytomegalic Neurons and Balloon Cells and Glutamate/GABA Synaptic Circuits

Developmental Neuroscience, 2005

Research paper thumbnail of Severe seizures in young children are associated with hippocampal neuron losses and aberrant mossy fiber sprouting during fascia dentata postnatal development

Epilepsy Research Supplement, Feb 1, 1996

Research paper thumbnail of Utility of ictal SPECT in temporal lobe epilepsy with hippocampal atrophy: a randomized trial

Research paper thumbnail of Pediatric Epilepsy and Epilepsy Surgery

Research paper thumbnail of Novel variant of cortical dysplasia in two cases of infantile intractable epilepsy

The Faseb Journal, Mar 1, 2008

Research paper thumbnail of DTI of tuber and perituberal tissue can predict epileptogenicity in tuberous sclerosis complex

Neurology, Jan 6, 2015

To evaluate whether diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) can predict epileptogenic tubers by measuring ... more To evaluate whether diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) can predict epileptogenic tubers by measuring apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC), fractional anisotropy, axial diffusivity, and radial diffusivity in both tubers and perituberal tissue in pediatric patients with tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) undergoing epilepsy surgery. We retrospectively selected 23 consecutive patients (aged 0.4-19.6 years, mean age of 5.2; 13 female, 10 male) who underwent presurgical DTI and subsequent surgical resection between 2004 and 2013 from the University of California-Los Angeles TSC Clinic. We evaluated presurgical examinations including video-EEG, brain MRI, (18)F-fluorodeoxyglucose-PET, magnetic source imaging, and intraoperative electrocorticography for determining epileptogenic tubers. A total of 545 tubers, 33 epileptogenic and 512 nonepileptogenic, were identified. Two observers generated the regions of interest (ROIs) of tubers (ROI(tuber)), the 4-mm-thick ring-shaped ROIs surrounding the tu...

Research paper thumbnail of An AKT3-FOXG1-reelin network underlies defective migration in human focal malformations of cortical development

Nature medicine, Jan 2, 2015

Focal malformations of cortical development (FMCDs) account for the majority of drug-resistant pe... more Focal malformations of cortical development (FMCDs) account for the majority of drug-resistant pediatric epilepsy. Postzygotic somatic mutations activating the phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate-3-kinase (PI3K)-protein kinase B (AKT)-mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathway are found in a wide range of brain diseases, including FMCDs. It remains unclear how a mutation in a small fraction of cells disrupts the architecture of the entire hemisphere. Within human FMCD-affected brain, we found that cells showing activation of the PI3K-AKT-mTOR pathway were enriched for the AKT3(E17K) mutation. Introducing the FMCD-causing mutation into mouse brain resulted in electrographic seizures and impaired hemispheric architecture. Mutation-expressing neural progenitors showed misexpression of reelin, which led to a non-cell autonomous migration defect in neighboring cells, due at least in part to derepression of reelin transcription in a manner dependent on the forkhead box (FOX) transcrip...

Research paper thumbnail of Topographical Distribution of Epileptogenic Tubers in Patients With Tuberous Sclerosis Complex

Journal of child neurology, Jan 15, 2015

Tuberous sclerosis complex is a multisystem genetic syndrome often affecting the central nervous ... more Tuberous sclerosis complex is a multisystem genetic syndrome often affecting the central nervous system. The purpose of the current study was to identify topographical patterns in the distribution specific to epileptogenic (n = 37) and nonepileptogenic (n = 544) tubers throughout the brain for a cohort of 23 tuberous sclerosis complex patients with a history of seizures. Tubers localized to the inferior parietal lobes, middle frontal lobes, middle temporal lobes, or central sulcus regions were associated with a high frequency of epileptogenic tubers. Epileptogenic tubers occurred statistically more frequently within the inferior parietal lobe and within the central sulcus region in children younger than 1 or between 1 and 3 years old, respectively. Results imply seizure activity in tuberous sclerosis complex patients can be associated with the location of cortical tubers.

Research paper thumbnail of PEDIATRIC EPILEPSY | Animal Models of Infant-Onset Epileptic Encephalopathy

Encyclopedia of Basic Epilepsy Research, 2009

Research paper thumbnail of Evidence for the involvement of gamma delta T cells in the immune response in Rasmussen encephalitis

Journal of neuroinflammation, 2015

Rasmussen encephalitis (RE) is a rare neuroinflammatory disease characterized by intractable seiz... more Rasmussen encephalitis (RE) is a rare neuroinflammatory disease characterized by intractable seizures and progressive atrophy on one side of the cerebrum. Perivascular cuffing and clusters of T cells in the affected cortical hemisphere are indicative of an active cellular immune response. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) and brain-infiltrating lymphocytes (BILs) were isolated from 20 RE surgery specimens by standard methods, and CD3(+) T cell populations were analyzed by flow cytometry. Gamma delta T cell receptor spectratyping was carried out by nested PCR of reversed transcribed RNA extracted from RE brain tissue, followed by high resolution capillary electrophoresis. A MiSeq DNA sequencing platform was used to sequence the third complementarity determining region (CDR3) of δ1 chains. CD3(+) BILs from all of the RE brain specimens comprised both αβ and γδ T cells. The median αβ:γδ ratio was 1.9 (range 0.58-5.2) compared with a median ratio of 7.7 (range 2.7-40.8) in peri...

Research paper thumbnail of Interview with Matthew Diamond, 2014 Epilepsia prize winner

Research paper thumbnail of A journey around the world": Parent narratives of the journey to pediatric resective epilepsy surgery and beyond

Epilepsia, Jan 20, 2015

Although shorter time to pediatric resective epilepsy surgery is strongly associated with greater... more Although shorter time to pediatric resective epilepsy surgery is strongly associated with greater disease severity, other nonclinical diagnostic and sociodemographic factors also play a role. We aimed to examine parent-reported barriers to timely receipt of pediatric epilepsy surgery. We conducted 37 interviews of parents of children who previously had resective epilepsy surgery at University of California Los Angeles (UCLA; 2006-2011). Interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed, and systematically coded using thematic analysis by two independent coders, and subsequently checked for agreement. Clinical data, including "time to surgery" (age of epilepsy onset to surgery) were abstracted from medical records. The mean time to surgery was 5.3 years (standard deviation [SD] 3.8); surgery types included 32% hemispherectomy, 43% lobar/focal, and 24% multilobar. At surgery, parents were on average 38.4 years (SD 6.6) and children were on average 8.2 years (SD 4.7). The more ardu...

Research paper thumbnail of From the editors: Global awareness and International Epilepsy Day

Research paper thumbnail of Fevers and abnormal blood and cerebrospinal fluid studies after pediatric cerebral hemispherectomy: impact of etiology and age at surgery

Journal of neurosurgery. Pediatrics, 2013

The object of this study was to determine if etiology and age at surgery were linked with fevers ... more The object of this study was to determine if etiology and age at surgery were linked with fevers and altered white blood cell and CSF laboratory values after cerebral hemispherectomy. Seizure etiologies (n = 76) were classified into hemimegalencephaly (HME), cortical dysplasia (CD), infarcts (stroke), Rasmussen encephalitis (RE), history of infections, and Sturge-Weber syndrome (SWS) and were compared with clinical variables, maximum daily temperature (Tmax), and blood and CSF studies through Day 12 posthemispherectomy. The Tmax on Days 2-4 and 9-12 postsurgery were higher for HME and RE cases than for stroke cases. Patients with RE showed positive correlations, whereas those with SWS had negative correlations between Tmax and age at surgery. Blood WBC counts on postsurgery Days 3, 6, and 9-12 were higher in the HME and CD cases than in the stroke and RE cases. The percentage of blood polymorphonuclear cells (%bloodPMNs) was higher in the RE cases than in the HME, CD, and SWS cases....

Research paper thumbnail of Epilepsy neurosurgery in children

Handbook of clinical neurology, 2012

Because epilepsy in children can lead to untoward developmental consequences, the key notion is t... more Because epilepsy in children can lead to untoward developmental consequences, the key notion is that children with therapy-resistant epilepsy should be diagnosed early and referred to a pediatric epilepsy center so that they may receive a comprehensive evaluation by an interdisciplinary team experienced in treating this disorder. The diagnosis of therapy-resistant epilepsy should be entertained after the child has failed two antiepileptic drugs. Of all children diagnosed with treatment-resistant epilepsy, up to 33% may be eligible for ...

Research paper thumbnail of From the editors: The discrepancy between accumulative incidence and lifetime prevalence of epilepsy

Research paper thumbnail of From the editors : Introducing Epilepsia's Controversy in Epilepsy series

Research paper thumbnail of In contrast to kindled seizures, the frequency of spontaneous epilepsy in the limbic status model correlates with greater aberrant fascia dentata excitatory and inhibitory axon sprouting, and increased staining for N-methyl-D-aspartate, AMPA and GABA(A) receptors

Neuroscience, 1997

This study determined whether there were differences in hippocampal neuron loss and synaptic plas... more This study determined whether there were differences in hippocampal neuron loss and synaptic plasticity by comparing rats with spontaneous epilepsy after limbic status epilepticus and animals with a similar frequency of kindled seizures. At the University of Virginia, Sprague-Dawley rats were implanted with bilateral ventral hippocampal electrodes and treated as follows; no stimulation (electrode controls; n=5): hippocampal stimulation without status (stimulation controls; n=5); and limbic status from continuous hippocampal stimulation (n=12). The limbic status group were electrographically monitored for a minimum of four weeks. Four rats had no recorded chronic seizures (status controls), and all three control groups showed no differences in hippocampal pathology and were therefore incorporated into a single group (controls). Eight limbic status animals eventually developed chronic epilepsy (spontaneous seizures) and an additional eight rats were kindled to a similar number and fre...

Research paper thumbnail of Cannabidiol and medical marijuana for the treatment of epilepsy

Research paper thumbnail of Hippocampal neuron damage in human epilepsy: Meyer's hypothesis revisited

Progress in brain research, 2002

Whether hippocampal neuron loss and/or hippocampal sclerosis is the 'cause' or 'conse... more Whether hippocampal neuron loss and/or hippocampal sclerosis is the 'cause' or 'consequence' of seizures has been a fundamental question in human epilepsy studies for over a century. To address this question, this study examined hippocampal specimens from temporal lobe epilepsy patients (TLE; n = 572) and those with extra-temporal seizures and pathologies (n = 73) for qualitative signs of hippocampal sclerosis and quantitative neuron loss using cell counting techniques. Patients were additionally classified based on pathological substrate, and history of an initial precipitating injury (IPI). Results showed that: (1) Hippocampal sclerosis was strongly linked with an IPI in both TLE and extra-temporal seizure patients. (2) In TLE cases, IPIs showed an early age preference and often involved seizures, but IPIs were not age dependent and older IPI cases showed sclerosis that was indistinguishable from younger IPI patients. (3) In TLE patients, longer seizure durations w...