J
Julia Jacobs
Researcher at University of Freiburg
Publications - 115
Citations - 5983
Julia Jacobs is an academic researcher from University of Freiburg. The author has contributed to research in topics: Epilepsy & Ictal. The author has an hindex of 37, co-authored 103 publications receiving 5037 citations. Previous affiliations of Julia Jacobs include Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital & University of Kiel.
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Journal ArticleDOI
High-frequency electroencephalographic oscillations correlate with outcome of epilepsy surgery.
Julia Jacobs,Maeike Zijlmans,Rina Zelmann,Claude-Édouard Chatillon,Jeffrey Hall,André Olivier,François Dubeau,Jean Gotman +7 more
TL;DR: This work investigated whether HFOs can delineate epileptogenic areas even outside the SOZ by correlating the resection of HFO‐generating areas with surgical outcome.
Journal ArticleDOI
Interictal high-frequency oscillations (80–500 Hz) are an indicator of seizure onset areas independent of spikes in the human epileptic brain
TL;DR: High‐frequency oscillations known as ripples and fast ripples can be recorded from macroelectrodes inserted in patients with intractable focal epilepsy and are most likely linked to epileptogenesis.
Journal ArticleDOI
High-frequency oscillations (HFOs) in clinical epilepsy.
Julia Jacobs,Richard J. Staba,Eishi Asano,Hiroshi Otsubo,Joyce Y. Wu,Maeike Zijlmans,Ismail S. Mohamed,Philippe Kahane,François Dubeau,Vincent Navarro,Jean Gotman +10 more
TL;DR: Even if HFOs are promising biomarkers of epileptic tissue, there are still uncertainties about mechanisms of generation, methods of analysis, and clinical applicability, and large multicenter prospective studies are needed prior to widespread clinical application.
Journal ArticleDOI
High frequency oscillations in intracranial EEGs mark epileptogenicity rather than lesion type.
Julia Jacobs,Pierre LeVan,Claude-Edouard Châtillon,André Olivier,François Dubeau,Jean Gotman +5 more
TL;DR: HFOs represent a marker for SOZ areas independent of the underlying pathology and that pathologic tissue changes alone do not lead to high rates of HFOs.
Journal ArticleDOI
High-frequency oscillations: The state of clinical research
Birgit Frauscher,Fabrice Bartolomei,Katsuhiro Kobayashi,Jan Cimbalnik,Maryse A. van 't Klooster,Stefan Rampp,Hiroshi Otsubo,Yvonne Höller,Joyce Y. Wu,Eishi Asano,Jerome Engel,Philippe Kahane,Julia Jacobs,Jean Gotman +13 more
TL;DR: There is increasing evidence that HFOs are useful to measure disease activity and assess treatment response using noninvasive EEG and magnetoencephalography, and this approach is particularly promising in children, because they show high scalp HFO rates.