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Karl Rössler

Researcher at Medical University of Vienna

Publications -  130
Citations -  3561

Karl Rössler is an academic researcher from Medical University of Vienna. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Epilepsy. The author has an hindex of 29, co-authored 99 publications receiving 2635 citations. Previous affiliations of Karl Rössler include University of Vienna & University of Erlangen-Nuremberg.

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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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Differential influence of hippocampal subfields to memory formation: insights from patients with temporal lobe epilepsy.

TL;DR: The results suggested an alternative model of how memory processing can be organized amongst hippocampal subfields, and that CA1 pyramidal cells are less critically involved in declarative human memory acquisition compared to dentate gyrus granule cells or CA4/CA3 pyramsidal cells.
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Epilepsy, hippocampal sclerosis and febrile seizures linked by common genetic variation around SCN1A

Dalia Kasperavičiūtė, +83 more
- 01 Oct 2013 - 
TL;DR: Genetic analysis and meta-analysis suggest SCN1A involvement in a common epilepsy syndrome, give new direction to biological understanding of mesial temporal lobe epilepsy with hippocampal sclerosis with febrile seizures, and open avenues for investigation of prognostic factors and possible prevention of epilepsy in some children with febs.
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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.