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Browsing by Author "Milovanovic, Maja (57198020720)"

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    Cerebellar cognitive affective syndrome presented as severe borderline personality disorder
    (2014)
    Pesic, Danilo (55582296200)
    ;
    Peljto, Amir (54409241100)
    ;
    Lukic, Biljana (57190192524)
    ;
    Milovanovic, Maja (57198020720)
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    Svetozarevic, Snezana (55813239400)
    ;
    Lecic Tosevski, Dusica (6602315043)
    An increasing number of findings confirm the significance of cerebellum in affecting regulation and early learning. Most consistent findings refer to association of congenital vermis anomalies with deficits in nonmotor functions of cerebellum. In this paper we presented a young woman who was treated since sixteen years of age for polysubstance abuse, affective instability, and self-harming who was later diagnosed with borderline personality disorder. Since the neurological and neuropsychological reports pointed to signs of cerebellar dysfunction and dysexecutive syndrome, we performed magnetic resonance imaging of brain which demonstrated partially developed vermis and rhombencephalosynapsis. These findings match the description of cerebellar cognitive affective syndrome and show an overlap with clinical manifestations of borderline personality disorder. © 2014 Danilo Pesic et al.
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    Epilepsy and interictal epileptiform activity in patients with autism spectrum disorders
    (2019)
    Milovanovic, Maja (57198020720)
    ;
    Radivojevic, Vlada (6603091521)
    ;
    Radosavljev-Kircanski, Jelena (54793436300)
    ;
    Grujicic, Roberto (57204161597)
    ;
    Toskovic, Oliver (28867554600)
    ;
    Aleksić-Hil, Olivera (36454761400)
    ;
    Pejovic-Milovancevic, Milica (57218683898)
    Purpose: The purpose of this study was to determine the prevalence of epilepsy and subclinical epileptiform abnormalities in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), and to investigate its effects on core autistic symptoms and adaptive behavior skills. Methods: Patients with diagnosis of ASD who met full criteria on Autism Diagnostic Interview-Revised (ADI-R) were included in the study. Adaptive behavior skills were assessed by Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scale-II (VABS-II). Clinical assessment for epilepsy and video electroencephalography (EEG) (v-EEG) examinations during wakefulness and/or sleep were prospectively performed in all patients. Results: A total of 112 patients with diagnosis of ASD of mean age 6.58 ± 3.72 were included in the study. Based on clinical and v-EEG assessments, three groups of patients were defined: 1) patients with epilepsy (n = 17; 15.2%); 2) patients with epileptiform discharges in absence of clinical seizures (n = 14; 12.5%); 3) patients without epilepsy and without epileptiform discharges (n = 81; 72.3%). There were no significant differences between three groups of patients on ADI-R subscores. Speech development was also not significantly related to epilepsy. There was a slight tendency of the VABS-II motor skills score to be higher in the group of patients with autism without clinical diagnosis of epilepsy and without subclinical epileptiform discharges (p < 0.05) in comparison with the two other groups. According to this tendency, we might claim that patients with higher scores on motor skills could have 0.88 times lower odds for having epileptiform EEG activity. Conclusions: According to our results, we were not able to detect differences in the ADI-R between the three populations with ASD, all with unknown etiology. Epilepsy, as well as subclinical epileptic discharges, showed small effects on Motor Skills in patients with autism, and had no effect on adaptive behavior Communication/Socialization/Daily Living Skills. © 2018 Elsevier Inc.
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    Epilepsy and interictal epileptiform activity in patients with autism spectrum disorders
    (2019)
    Milovanovic, Maja (57198020720)
    ;
    Radivojevic, Vlada (6603091521)
    ;
    Radosavljev-Kircanski, Jelena (54793436300)
    ;
    Grujicic, Roberto (57204161597)
    ;
    Toskovic, Oliver (28867554600)
    ;
    Aleksić-Hil, Olivera (36454761400)
    ;
    Pejovic-Milovancevic, Milica (57218683898)
    Purpose: The purpose of this study was to determine the prevalence of epilepsy and subclinical epileptiform abnormalities in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), and to investigate its effects on core autistic symptoms and adaptive behavior skills. Methods: Patients with diagnosis of ASD who met full criteria on Autism Diagnostic Interview-Revised (ADI-R) were included in the study. Adaptive behavior skills were assessed by Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scale-II (VABS-II). Clinical assessment for epilepsy and video electroencephalography (EEG) (v-EEG) examinations during wakefulness and/or sleep were prospectively performed in all patients. Results: A total of 112 patients with diagnosis of ASD of mean age 6.58 ± 3.72 were included in the study. Based on clinical and v-EEG assessments, three groups of patients were defined: 1) patients with epilepsy (n = 17; 15.2%); 2) patients with epileptiform discharges in absence of clinical seizures (n = 14; 12.5%); 3) patients without epilepsy and without epileptiform discharges (n = 81; 72.3%). There were no significant differences between three groups of patients on ADI-R subscores. Speech development was also not significantly related to epilepsy. There was a slight tendency of the VABS-II motor skills score to be higher in the group of patients with autism without clinical diagnosis of epilepsy and without subclinical epileptiform discharges (p < 0.05) in comparison with the two other groups. According to this tendency, we might claim that patients with higher scores on motor skills could have 0.88 times lower odds for having epileptiform EEG activity. Conclusions: According to our results, we were not able to detect differences in the ADI-R between the three populations with ASD, all with unknown etiology. Epilepsy, as well as subclinical epileptic discharges, showed small effects on Motor Skills in patients with autism, and had no effect on adaptive behavior Communication/Socialization/Daily Living Skills. © 2018 Elsevier Inc.
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    Epileptic seizures provoked by bathing with water at room temperature
    (2012)
    Kravljanac, Ruzica (6506380739)
    ;
    Djuric, Milena (36607792300)
    ;
    Milovanovic, Maja (57198020720)
    ;
    Radivojevic, Vlada (6603091521)
    We report two Caucasian boys with seizures induced by bathing in lukewarm water. Different mechanisms of provocation were observed; in one boy a complex partial seizure was provoked by pouring water over the body, while in the other boy, a complex partial seizure with secondary generalisation was provoked by immersion. Since the water was not hot in either of the cases, the pathophysiological mechanism was not clear and the seizures could not be explained as hyperthermic-related events. We suggest that in the ILAE classification of epilepsies and epileptic seizures, bathing epilepsy should be added as a separate category, distinct from "hot-water epilepsy".
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    Epileptic seizures provoked by bathing with water at room temperature
    (2012)
    Kravljanac, Ruzica (6506380739)
    ;
    Djuric, Milena (36607792300)
    ;
    Milovanovic, Maja (57198020720)
    ;
    Radivojevic, Vlada (6603091521)
    We report two Caucasian boys with seizures induced by bathing in lukewarm water. Different mechanisms of provocation were observed; in one boy a complex partial seizure was provoked by pouring water over the body, while in the other boy, a complex partial seizure with secondary generalisation was provoked by immersion. Since the water was not hot in either of the cases, the pathophysiological mechanism was not clear and the seizures could not be explained as hyperthermic-related events. We suggest that in the ILAE classification of epilepsies and epileptic seizures, bathing epilepsy should be added as a separate category, distinct from "hot-water epilepsy".

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