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Correction to: Brivaracetam use in clinical practice: a Delphi consensus on its role as first add-on therapy in focal epilepsy and beyond (Neurological Sciences, (2024), 10.1007/s10072-024-07485-w)
The original article contains an error. In the Consensus Collaborators Group, author name has been inverted during the publication. Family name was captured first instead of the given name. The corrected names as follows: Consensus Collaborators Group: Daniela Audenino, Giovanni Boero, Vittoria Cianci, Mario Coletti Moja, Eduardo Cumbo, Filippo Dainese, Giuseppe Didato, Elisa Fallica, Alfonso Giordano, Emilio Le Piane, Mariangela Panebianco, Marta Piccioli, Pietro Pignatta, Monica Puligheddu, Patrizia Pulitano, Federica Ranzato, Rosaria Renna, Eleonora Rosati, Stella Vergine. The original article has been corrected
Clinical predictors of response to adjunctive brivaracetam: Insights from real-world data
Investigation of the brain networks underlying eye closure sensitivity in Jeavons syndrome and healthy subjects: an EEG-fMRI study
Letter to the editor: focal non-convulsive status epilepticus manifesting as utilization behavior
Unilateral catalepsy in non-convulsive status epilepticus
Catalepsy is defined as a loss of motor and it is listed among the clinical features associated with catatonic syndrome and may occur in association with both psychiatric and neurological disorders. Isolated catalepsy represents a much rarer phenomenon, and has been occasionally reported due to focal brain injuries (e.g. strokes) involving either cortical or subcortical regions. Here, we describe the case of an 81-year-old man presenting with isolated unilateral catalepsy as the main manifestation of focal non-convulsive status epilepticus, ipsilateral to the cataleptic limbs. To our knowledge, this is the first report of ictal catalepsy, which highlights the need to consider epilepsy in the diagnostic algorithm for both hyper- and hypokinetic movement disorders
The Evolution of Movement Disorders in N-Methyl-D-Aspartate Receptor Encephalitis—A Video Log
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Water drinking behavior: a clinical clue for the diagnosis of limbic encephalitis in an elderly patient
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