1Edward H, Bertram S, Carol S. The pathological substrate of limbic epilepsy: neuronal loss in the medial dorsal thalamic nucleus as the consistent change. Epilepsy, 2000, 41 ( suppl 6) : S3 - S8.
2Mathem GW, Bebb TL, Mischel PS, et al. Childhood generalized and mesial temporal epilepsies deminstrate different amounts and patters of hippocampal neuron loss and mossy fiber synaptic reorganization. Brain, 1996, 119(Pt 3): 965-987.
3Holmes GL, Sarkisian M, Ben - Ari Y, et al. Mossy fiber sprouting after recurrent seizures during early development in rats. J Comp Neurol, 1999, 404(3) : 537 - 553.
4Peredery O, Persinger MA, Pinker G, et al. Tempera changes in neuronal dropout following inductions of lithium/pilocarpine seizures in the rat. Brain Res, 2000, 881(1): 9-17.
5Grattan - Smith P, Hopkins I, Shield L, et al. Status epileptieus - induced brain damage and opercular syndrome in childhood. Dev Med child Neurol, 2000, 42(6): 428-429.
6Mountz JM, Tolbert LC, Lill DW, et al. Functional deficits in autistic disorder, characterization by technetium- 99m- HMPAO and SPECT. J Nucl Med, 1995, 36(7): 1156- 1162.
7Oe H, Yuasa R, Tsuchiyama M, et al. Neuroimaging findings of hemiconvulsions, hemiplegia, epilepsy syndromel. Rinsho Shinkeigaku, 1999, 39(4): 485 - 488.
8Hoffman HJ, Hendrick EB, Dennis M, et al. Hemispherectomy for Sturge-Weber syndrome. Childs Brain, 1979, 5(3): 233-248.
9Riikonen R. Long- term outcome of West syndrome: a study of adults with a history of infantile spasms. Epilepsia, 1996, 37(4) : 367 - 372.
10Smalley SL. Autism and tuberous sclerosis. J Autism Dev Disord, 1998, 28(5) : 407 - 414.