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Andrew W. McEvoy

Researcher at University College London

Publications -  135
Citations -  5034

Andrew W. McEvoy is an academic researcher from University College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Epilepsy & Epilepsy surgery. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 113 publications receiving 4127 citations. Previous affiliations of Andrew W. McEvoy include Epilepsy Society & Queen's University.

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The long-term outcome of adult epilepsy surgery, patterns of seizure remission, and relapse: a cohort study.

TL;DR: Long-term outcome of epilepsy surgery in adults by establishing patterns of seizure remission and relapse after surgery is identified, providing realistic expectations and indicating the scope for further improvements in presurgical assessment and surgical treatment of people with chronic epilepsy.
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Histopathological Findings in Brain Tissue Obtained during Epilepsy Surgery.

Ingmar Blümcke, +74 more
TL;DR: In patients with drug‐resistant focal epilepsy requiring surgery, hippocampal sclerosis was the most common histopathological diagnosis among adults, and focal cortical dysplasia was the second most common lesion in both groups.
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Defining Meyer's loop–temporal lobe resections, visual field deficits and diffusion tensor tractography

TL;DR: There is considerable variation in the anterior extent of Meyer's loop, and diffusion tensor tractography of the optic radiation is a potentially useful method to assess an individual patient's risk of postoperative VFDs following anterior temporal lobe resection.
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Imaging language networks before and after anterior temporal lobe resection: results of a longitudinal fMRI study.

TL;DR: This work investigated reorganization of language in left‐hemisphere–dominant patients before and after ATLR; whether preoperative functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) predicts postoperative naming decline; and efficiency of postoperative language networks.
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Seizure outcome and use of antiepileptic drugs after epilepsy surgery according to histopathological diagnosis: a retrospective multicentre cohort study

Herm J. Lamberink, +187 more
- 01 Sep 2020 - 
TL;DR: Children were more often drug-free; temporal lobe surgeries had the best seizure outcomes; and a longer duration of epilepsy was associated with reduced chance of favourable seizure outcomes and drug freedom.