G
Georgia Ramantani
Researcher at Boston Children's Hospital
Publications - 108
Citations - 2569
Georgia Ramantani is an academic researcher from Boston Children's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Epilepsy & Epilepsy surgery. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 82 publications receiving 1904 citations. Previous affiliations of Georgia Ramantani include University Medical Center Freiburg & Aarhus University Hospital.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Scalp HFO rates are higher for larger lesions
Dorottya Cserpán,A. Gennari,Luca Gaito,S. P. Lo Biundo,Ruth O'Gorman Tuura,Johannes Sarnthein,Georgia Ramantani +6 more
TL;DR: Observations support that all lesions may generate HFO detectable in scalp EEG, irrespective of their characteristics, whereas larger epileptogenic lesions generate higher scalp HFO rates over larger areas that are thus more accessible to detection.
Journal ArticleDOI
Adult phenotype of KCNQ2 encephalopathy.
Stephanie Boets,Katrine M Johannesen,Anne Destree,Filippo Manti,Georgia Ramantani,Gaetan Lesca,Laurent Vercueil,Mary Kay Koenig,Pasquale Striano,Rikke S. Møller,Edward C. Cooper,Sarah Weckhuysen +11 more
TL;DR: The most common seizure type was tonic seizures (early) infancy, and tonic-clonic and focal impaired awareness seizures later in life, while most patients had daily seizures at seizure onset, seizure frequency declined or remitted during childhood and adulthood as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI
Added value and limitations of electrical source localization
TL;DR: An important outcome will be the foundation of a Chinese neuropathology task force under the umbrella of CAAE (endorsed by the ILAE Task Force for Neuropathology) and a web-based virtual microscope platform to discuss difficult-to-classify cases among neuropathologists from associated Chinese epilepsy centers.
Journal ArticleDOI
Comparison of the real-world effectiveness of vertical versus lateral functional hemispherotomy techniques for pediatric drug-resistant epilepsy: A post hoc analysis of the HOPS study
Aria Fallah,Evan J. H. Lewis,George M. Ibrahim,Olivia Kola,Chi-Hong Tseng,William B. Harris,Jia-Shu Chen,Kao-Min Lin,Lixin Cai,Qingzhu Liu,Jiuluan Lin,Wenjing Zhou,Gary W. Mathern,Matthew D. Smyth,Brent R. O'Neill,Roy W. R. Dudley,John Ragheb,Sanjiv Bhatia,Daniel Delev,Georgia Ramantani,Georgia Ramantani,Josef Zentner,Anthony C. Wang,Christian Dorfer,Martha Feucht,Thomas Czech,Robert J. Bollo,Galymzhan Issabekov,Hongwei Zhu,Mary B. Connolly,Paul Steinbok,Jianguo Zhang,Kai Zhang,Eveline Teresa Hidalgo,Howard L. Weiner,Lily C. Wong-Kisiel,Samuel Lapalme-Remis,Manjari Tripathi,Poodipedi Sarat Chandra,Walter Hader,Feng-Peng Wang,Yi Yao,Pierre-Olivier Champagne,Tristan Brunette-Clément,Qiang Guo,Shao-Chun Li,Marcelo Budke,Maria Angeles Pérez-Jiménez,Christian Raftopoulos,P. Finet,Pauline Michel,Karl Lothard Schaller,Martin N. Stienen,Valentina Baro,Christian Cantillano Malone,Juan Pociecha,Noelia Chamorro,Valeria L. Muro,Marec von Lehe,Silvia Vieker,Chima O. Oluigbo,William D. Gaillard,Mashael Al-Khateeb,Faisal Al Otaibi,Niklaus Krayenbühl,Jeffrey Bolton,Phillip L. Pearl,Alexander G. Weil +67 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a post hoc subgroup analysis of the HOPS (Hemispheric Surgery Outcome Prediction Scale) study was conducted to determine whether the vertical parasagittal approach or the lateral peri-insular/peri-Sylvian approach is the superior technique in achieving longterm seizure freedom.