Article
Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (1531) (remove)
Has Fulltext
- no (1531) (remove)
Keywords
- LAPS (4)
- CellDrum (3)
- hydrogen peroxide (3)
- Bacillus atrophaeus (2)
- Empirical process (2)
- Field-effect sensor (2)
- Goodness-of-fit test (2)
- Independence test (2)
- Light-addressable potentiometric sensor (2)
- Paired sample (2)
- Parametric bootstrap (2)
- Raman spectroscopy (2)
- Stiffness (2)
- constructive alignment (2)
- damage (2)
- examination (2)
- field-effect sensor (2)
- frequency mixing magnetic detection (2)
- impedance spectroscopy (2)
- likelihood ratio test (2)
- locomotion (2)
- long-term retention (2)
- multimodal (2)
- muscle fascicle behavior (2)
- not identically distributed (2)
- practical learning (2)
- tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) (2)
- ultrasound (2)
- ultrasound imaging (2)
- (Bio)degradation (1)
- Acceleration (1)
- Achilles tendon (1)
- Adaptive control (1)
- Afterload (1)
- Ageing (1)
- AlterG (1)
- Alzheimer's disease (1)
- Anastomotic leakage (1)
- Anatomy (1)
- Annulus Fibrosus (1)
- Architectural gear ratio (1)
- Assistive technology (1)
- Asymptotic efficiency (1)
- Autolysis (1)
- Automatic control (1)
- Bacillus atrophaeus spores (1)
- Bacillus sp (1)
- Balance (1)
- Biocomposites (1)
- Biomechanical simulation (1)
- Biosolubilization (1)
- Booster Station (1)
- Bootstrap (1)
- Bootstrapping (1)
- Brownian Pillow (1)
- CNOT (1)
- Calorimetric gas sensor (1)
- Capacitive field-effect (1)
- Capacitive model (1)
- Cardiac myocytes (1)
- Cardiac tissue (1)
- Categorial variable (1)
- Cell permeability (1)
- Cellular force (1)
- Cementoblast (1)
- Censored data (1)
- Chemical images (1)
- Chemical imaging sensor (1)
- Chemical sensor (1)
- Circular Dichroism (1)
- Co-managed care (1)
- Collective risk model (1)
- Competitiveness (1)
- Complex System (1)
- Complex-valued eigenvalues (1)
- Compliance (1)
- Compression (1)
- Computational biomechanics (1)
- Concomitant (1)
- Conductive Boundary Condition (1)
- Constitutive model (1)
- Contractile tension (1)
- Contractility (1)
- Coverage probability (1)
- Cramér-von-Mises statistic (1)
- Cramér-von-Mises test (1)
- Cross border adjustment mechanism (1)
- Crámer–von-Mises distance (1)
- C–V method (1)
- DNA biosensor (1)
- DNA hybridization (1)
- DPA (dipicolinic acid) (1)
- Damage mechanics theory (1)
- Decomposition (1)
- Deep Learning (1)
- Dehydrogenase (1)
- Diaphorase (1)
- Disc Degeneration (1)
- Discontinuous fractures (1)
- Discrete Optimization (1)
- Distorsion des oberen Sprunggelenks (1)
- Drug simulation (1)
- E-Mobility (1)
- EIS capacitive sensor (1)
- ES-FEM (1)
- Eigenvalue trajectories (1)
- Elderly (1)
- Electrolyte–insulator–semiconductor (1)
- Electromagnetism (1)
- Electromechanical modeling (1)
- Elektroenzephalographie (1)
- Elemental (1)
- End-to-end colorectal anastomosis (1)
- Endothelial cells (1)
- Endothelial dysfunction (1)
- Energy-intensive industry (1)
- Enzymatic biosensor (1)
- Enzyme coverage (1)
- Enzyme logic gate (1)
- Equivalence test (1)
- Esophageal Doppler monitor (1)
- External knee adduction moments (1)
- FS-FEM (1)
- Fall prevention (1)
- Field effect (1)
- Field-effect biosensor (1)
- Finite element analysis (1)
- Finite element modelling (1)
- Floor prices (1)
- Force (1)
- Forces (1)
- Fracture configuration (1)
- Fracture simulation (1)
- Freeze–thaw process (1)
- Frequency adaption (1)
- Frequency mixing magnetic detection (1)
- Functional Delta Method (1)
- Gamma distribution (1)
- Glaucoma (1)
- Goodness-of-fit tests for uniformity (1)
- Ground-level falls (1)
- Hadamard differentiability (1)
- Haemodialysis (1)
- Handbike (1)
- Heart tissue culture (1)
- Heterostructure (1)
- Hodgkin–Huxley models (1)
- Hoeffding-Blum-Kiefer-Rosenblatt independence test (1)
- Homogenization (1)
- Hotelling’s T² test (1)
- Human-Computer interaction (1)
- Hydrogen peroxide (1)
- Image Reconstruction (1)
- Impedance spectroscopy (1)
- Incomplete data (1)
- Induced pluripotent stem cells (1)
- Inotropic compounds (1)
- Integrated empirical distribution (survival) function (1)
- Interior transmission problem (1)
- Intervertebral Disc (1)
- Intradiscal Pressure (1)
- Inverse Scattering (1)
- Inverse dynamic problem (1)
- Inverse kinematic problem (1)
- Ion channels (1)
- Iterative learning control (1)
- Kinetic energy (1)
- LPS (1)
- Lab-on-Chip (1)
- Label-free detection (1)
- Langevin theory (1)
- Layer-by-layer adsorption (1)
- LbL films (1)
- Light-addressable Potentiometric Sensor (1)
- Lipopolysaccharide (1)
- Liver (1)
- Long COVID (1)
- MOS (1)
- Machine learning (1)
- Magnetic nanoparticles (1)
- Manipulated variables (1)
- Marginal homogeneity test (1)
- Mechanotransduction (1)
- Metascintillator (1)
- Microcirculation (1)
- Micromagnetic simulation (1)
- Mild cognitive impairment (1)
- Mobility (1)
- Mobility tests (1)
- Mobility transition (1)
- Multi-criteria decision analysis (1)
- Multi-sample problem (1)
- Multianalyte detection (1)
- Multiple TOF kernels (1)
- Muscle (1)
- Muscle Fascicle (1)
- Muscle Force (1)
- Musculoskeletal model (1)
- Musculoskeletal system (1)
- Myocardial infarction and cardiac death (1)
- NONOate (1)
- Natural fibres (1)
- Negative impedance convertor (1)
- Neural Network (1)
- Nitric Oxide (1)
- Nitric Oxide Donor (1)
- Non-parallel fissures (1)
- Nonequilibrium dynamics (1)
- Nonlinear Dynamics (1)
- Nucleus Pulposus (1)
- Numerical inversion of Laplace transforms (1)
- Numerical linear algebra (1)
- O2 plasma (1)
- Ocular blood flow (1)
- Organic light-emitting diode display (1)
- Paralympic sport (1)
- Penicillin (1)
- Pharmacology (1)
- Physiology (1)
- Poly(allylamine hydrochloride) (1)
- Poly(d,l-lacticacid) (1)
- Polyimide (1)
- Polymer-matrix composites (1)
- Post-COVID-19 syndrome (1)
- Preference assessment (1)
- Product-integration (1)
- Proximal humerus fracture (1)
- Psychiatrische Biomarker (1)
- Pulsations (1)
- Pump System (1)
- RVA (1)
- Real-time monitoring (1)
- Recombinant activated protein C (1)
- Regionalization (1)
- Rehabilitation Technology and Prosthetics (1)
- Rehabilitation engineering (1)
- Resampling test (1)
- Resolvent Operator (1)
- Resonance-mode measurement (1)
- Retinal vessel analysis (1)
- Retinal vessels (1)
- Robotic rehabilitation (1)
- Rotator cuff (1)
- Running (1)
- S-FEM (1)
- ScaLAPACK (1)
- Schlafspindeldetektion (1)
- Semi-parametric random censorship model (1)
- Septic cardiomyopathy (1)
- Simulation (1)
- Simultaneous determination (1)
- Sn₃O₄ (1)
- Spleen (1)
- Sprunggelenkorthesen (1)
- Steel industry (1)
- Sterilisation process (1)
- Stress concentrations (1)
- SunRav BookEditor (1)
- Surgical Navigation and Robotics (1)
- Surgical staplers (1)
- Survival analysis (1)
- TMV adsorption (1)
- TOF PET (1)
- Ta₂O₅ gate (1)
- Technical Operations Research (TOR) (1)
- Tendon Rupture (1)
- Tendon properties (1)
- Tension (1)
- Tinetti test (1)
- Transmission Eigenvalues (1)
- Uniaxial compression test (1)
- Vapnik–Čhervonenkis class (1)
- Variable height stapler design (1)
- Vascular response (1)
- Vasomotions (1)
- Velocity (1)
- Visual field asymmetry (1)
- Volterra integral equation (1)
- Volume of confidence regions (1)
- Volume status (1)
- XOR (1)
- achilles tendon (1)
- actin cytoskeleton (1)
- adipose-derived stromal cells (ASCs) (1)
- adsorption (1)
- agility (1)
- allocation (1)
- anaesthetic complications (1)
- anisotropy (1)
- ankle braces (1)
- ankle sprain (1)
- annealing (1)
- aortic perfusion (1)
- artificial olfactory image (1)
- asymptotic relative efficiency (1)
- barium strontium titanate (1)
- biaxial tensile experiment (1)
- biomechanics (1)
- biopotential electrodes (1)
- biosensor (1)
- biosensors (1)
- bootstrap (1)
- calorimetric gas sensor (1)
- calorimetric gas sensor;hydrogen peroxide;wireless sensor system (1)
- capacitive field-effect sensor (1)
- carbonized rice husk (1)
- cardiomyocyte biomechanics (1)
- catalytic metal (1)
- cell aerosolization (1)
- cell atomization (1)
- central symmetry test (1)
- cerebral small vessel disease (1)
- chance constrained programming (1)
- chemical sensor (1)
- cognitive impairment (1)
- community dwelling (1)
- complete block symmetry (1)
- computational fluid dynamics analysis (1)
- conditional excess distribution (1)
- conditional expectation principle (1)
- confidence interval (1)
- connective tissue (1)
- constitutive modeling (1)
- contactless conductivity sensor (1)
- correlation (1)
- coupled Néel–Brownian relaxation dynamics (1)
- covariance principle (1)
- dental trauma (1)
- dialysis (1)
- difficult airway (1)
- distance learning (1)
- distorted element (1)
- double-lumen tube intubation (1)
- drop jump (1)
- e-books (1)
- e-issues (1)
- eigensolvers (1)
- electrolyte-insulator semiconductor sensor (EIS) (1)
- electromyography (1)
- electronic nose (1)
- endoluminal (1)
- endospores (1)
- energy absorption (1)
- energy dissipation (1)
- enzymatic (bio)degradation (1)
- enzyme cascade (1)
- exchangeability test (1)
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (1)
- fibulare Bandruptur (1)
- field-effect structure (1)
- force generation (1)
- forecast (1)
- forehead EEG (1)
- frequency mixing (1)
- functional data (1)
- gait (1)
- gas sensor (1)
- glucose oxidase (GOx) (1)
- goodness-of-fit test (1)
- healthy aging (1)
- heavy metals (1)
- hiPS cardiomyocytes (1)
- high-intensity exercise (1)
- high-k material (1)
- horseradish peroxidase (HRP) (1)
- huge dimensional data (1)
- humic acid (1)
- hydroxylation (1)
- hyper-gravity (1)
- hyperelastic (1)
- hypo-gravity (1)
- immobilization (1)
- in-ear EEG (1)
- in-situ monitoring (1)
- independence test (1)
- intraclass correlation coefficient (1)
- key performance indicators (1)
- lable-free detection (1)
- light-addressable potentiometric sensor (1)
- light-addressing technologies (1)
- lignite (1)
- limit analysis (1)
- lipopolysaccharide (1)
- magnetic actuation (1)
- magnetic beads (1)
- magnetic biosensing (1)
- magnetic nanoparticles (1)
- magnetic relaxation (1)
- magnetic sandwich immunoassay (1)
- magnetic sensing (1)
- magnetic separation (1)
- magnetic tweezers (1)
- magnetophoretic velocity (1)
- mechanical buffer (1)
- metal-oxide-semiconductor structure (1)
- micromagnetic simulation (1)
- multi-functional material (1)
- multinomial distribution (1)
- multiparametric immunoassays (1)
- multivariate normal distribution (1)
- muscle mechanics (1)
- nanobelts (1)
- non-simplex S-FEM elements (1)
- novel photoexcitation method (1)
- optical sensor setup (1)
- optical spore trapping (1)
- optical trapping (1)
- organosilanes (1)
- overload (1)
- parabolic flight (1)
- performance analysis (1)
- performance testing (1)
- physiology (1)
- plant virus detection (1)
- plug-based microfluidic device (1)
- poly(d, l-lactic acid) (1)
- portfolio risk (1)
- prevention (1)
- psychosocial (1)
- random effects (1)
- random effects meta-regression model (1)
- rehabilitation (1)
- reliability of structures (1)
- retinal microvasculature (1)
- retinal vessels (1)
- running (1)
- rupture of the fibular ligament (1)
- sEMG (1)
- sarcomere operating length (1)
- scanned light pulse technique (1)
- separable Hilbert space (1)
- series elastic element behavior (1)
- shakedown analysis (1)
- shoulder (1)
- silanization (1)
- simulation (1)
- smooth muscle contraction (1)
- softs (1)
- spatial resolution (1)
- sprint start (1)
- standard error of measurement (1)
- sterilisation (1)
- sterilization (1)
- sterilization conditions (1)
- stiffness (1)
- stochastic programming (1)
- strain energy function (1)
- stretch reflex (1)
- stretch-shortening cycle (1)
- superparamagnetic bead (1)
- superparamagnetic nanoparticles (1)
- surface functionalization (1)
- surface modification (1)
- survival (1)
- temperature (1)
- tendon rupture (1)
- test-retest reliability (1)
- tilted constant illumination (1)
- tri-lineage differentiation (1)
- turnip vein clearing virus (TVCV) (1)
- twin-fluid atomizer (1)
- ultrasonography (1)
- uniformly most powerful invariant test (1)
- unloading (1)
- videolaryngoscopy (1)
- virgin passive (1)
- viscoelasticity (1)
- visualization (1)
- walking (1)
- walking gait (1)
- · Psychiatrische Erkrankungen/Diagnostik (1)
Institute
- Fachbereich Medizintechnik und Technomathematik (1531) (remove)
After a liver tumor intervention the medical doctor has to compare both pre and postoperative CT acquisitions to ensure that all carcinogenic cells are destroyed. A correct assessment of the intervention is of vital importance, since it will reduce the probability of tumor recurrence. Some methods have been proposed to support the medical doctors during the assessment process, however, all of them focus on secondary tumors. In this paper a tool is presented that enables the outcome validation for both primary and secondary tumors. Therefore, a multiphase registration (preoperative arterial and portal phases) followed by a registration between the pre and postoperative CT images is carried out. The first registration is in charge of the primary tumors that are only visible in the arterial phase. The secondary tumors will be incorporated in the second registration step. Finally, the part of the tumor that was not covered by the necrosis is quantified and visualized. The method has been tested in 9 patients, with an average registration error of 1.41 mm.
BACKGROUND
Immunosuppression is often considered as an indication for antibiotic prophylaxis to prevent surgical site infections (SSI) while performing skin surgery. However, the data on the risk of developing SSI after dermatologic surgery in immunosuppressed patients are limited.
PATIENTS AND METHODS
All patients of the Department of Dermatology and Allergology at the University Hospital of RWTH Aachen in Aachen, Germany, who underwent hospitalization for a dermatologic surgery between June 2016 and January 2017 (6 months), were followed up after surgery until completion of the wound healing process. The follow-up addressed the occurrence of SSI and the need for systemic antibiotics after the operative procedure. Immunocompromised patients were compared with immunocompetent patients. The investigation was conducted as a retrospective analysis of patient records.
RESULTS
The authors performed 284 dermatologic surgeries in 177 patients. Nineteen percent (54/284) of the skin surgery was performed on immunocompromised patients. The most common indications for surgical treatment were nonmelanoma skin cancer and malignant melanomas. Surgical site infections occurred in 6.7% (19/284) of the cases. In 95% (18/19), systemic antibiotic treatment was needed. Twenty-one percent of all SSI (4/19) were seen in immunosuppressed patients.
CONCLUSION
According to the authors' data, immunosuppression does not represent a significant risk factor for SSI after dermatologic surgery. However, larger prospective studies are needed to make specific recommendations on the use of antibiotic prophylaxis while performing skin surgery in these patients.
The available data on complications after dermatologic surgery have improved over the past years. Particularly, additional risk factors have been identified for surgical site infections (SSI). Purulent surgical sites, older age, involvement of head, neck, and acral regions, and also the involvement of less experienced surgeons have been reported to increase the risk of the SSI after dermatologic surgeries.1 In general, the incidence of SSI after skin surgery is considered to be low.1,2 However, antibiotics in dermatologic surgeries, especially in the perioperative setting, seem to be overused,3,4 particularly regarding developing antibiotic resistances and side effects.
Immunosuppression has been recommended to be taken into consideration as an additional indication for antibiotic prophylaxis to prevent SSI after skin surgery in special cases.5,6 However, these recommendations do not specify the exact dermatologic surgeries, and were not specifically developed for dermatologic surgery patients and treatments, but adopted from other surgical fields.6 According to the survey conducted on American College of Mohs Surgery members in 2012, 13% to 29% of the surgeons administered antibiotic prophylaxis to immunocompromised patients to prevent SSI while performing dermatologic surgery on noninfected skin,3 although this was not recommended by Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology Advisory Statement. Indeed, the data on the risk of developing SSI after dermatologic surgery in immunosuppressed patients are limited. However, it is possible that due to the insufficient evidence on the risk of SSI occurrence in this patient group, dermatologic surgeons tend to overuse perioperative antibiotic prophylaxis.
To make specific recommendations on the use of antibiotic prophylaxis in immunosuppressed patients in the field of skin surgery, more information about the incidence of SSI after dermatologic surgery in these patients is needed. The aim of this study was to fill this data gap by investigating whether there is an increased risk of SSI after skin surgery in immunocompromised patients compared with immunocompetent patients.
Postural and metabolic benefits of using a forearm support walker in older adults with impairments
(2019)
Background
Impairment of neurovascular coupling (NVC) was recently reported in the context of subarachnoid hemorrhage and may correlate with disease severity and outcome. However, previous techniques to evaluate NVC required invasive procedures. Retinal vessels may represent an alternative option for non-invasive assessment of NVC.
Methods
A prototype of an adapted retinal vessel analyzer was used to assess retinal vessel diameter in mice. Dynamic vessel analysis (DVA) included an application of monochromatic flicker light impulses in predefined frequencies for evaluating NVC. All retinae were harvested after DVA and electroretinograms were performed.
Results
A total of 104 retinal scans were conducted in 21 male mice (90 scans). Quantitative arterial recordings were feasible only in a minority of animals, showing an emphasized reaction to flicker light impulses (8 mice; 14 scans). A characteristic venous response to flicker light, however, could observed in the majority of animals. Repeated measurements resulted in a significant decrease of baseline venous diameter (7 mice; 7 scans, p < 0.05). Ex-vivo electroretinograms, performed after in-vivo DVA, demonstrated a significant reduction of transretinal signaling in animals with repeated DVA (n = 6, p < 0.001).
Conclusions
To the best of our knowledge, this is the first non-invasive study assessing murine retinal vessel response to flicker light with characteristic changes in NVC. The imaging system can be used for basic research and enables the investigation of retinal vessel dimension and function in control mice and genetically modified animals.
Algal polysaccharides (extracellular polysaccharides) and carbon nanotubes (CNTs) were adsorbed on dioctadecyldimethylammonium bromide Langmuir monolayers to serve as a matrix for the incorporation of urease. The physicochemical properties of the supramolecular system as a monolayer at the air–water interface were investigated by surface pressure–area isotherms, surface potential–area isotherms, interfacial shear rheology, vibrational spectroscopy, and Brewster angle microscopy. The floating monolayers were transferred to hydrophilic solid supports, quartz, mica, or capacitive electrolyte–insulator–semiconductor (EIS) devices, through the Langmuir–Blodgett (LB) technique, forming mixed films, which were investigated by quartz crystal microbalance, fluorescence spectroscopy, and field emission gun scanning electron microscopy. The enzyme activity was studied with UV–vis spectroscopy, and the feasibility of the thin film as a urea sensor was essayed in an EIS sensor device. The presence of CNT in the enzyme–lipid LB film not only tuned the catalytic activity of urease but also helped to conserve its enzyme activity. Viability as a urease sensor was demonstrated with capacitance–voltage and constant capacitance measurements, exhibiting regular and distinctive output signals over all concentrations used in this work. These results are related to the synergism between the compounds on the active layer, leading to a surface morphology that allowed fast analyte diffusion owing to an adequate molecular accommodation, which also preserved the urease activity. This work demonstrates the feasibility of employing LB films composed of lipids, CNT, algal polysaccharides, and enzymes as EIS devices for biosensing applications.
Monitoring of organic acids (OA) and volatile fatty acids (VFA) is crucial for the control of anaerobic digestion. In case of unstable process conditions, an accumulation of these intermediates occurs. In the present work, two different enzyme-based biosensor arrays are combined and presented for facile electrochemical determination of several process-relevant analytes. Each biosensor utilizes a platinum sensor chip (14 × 14 mm²) with five individual working electrodes. The OA biosensor enables simultaneous measurement of ethanol, formate, d- and l-lactate, based on a bi-enzymatic detection principle. The second VFA biosensor provides an amperometric platform for quantification of acetate and propionate, mediated by oxidation of hydrogen peroxide. The cross-sensitivity of both biosensors toward potential interferents, typically present in fermentation samples, was investigated. The potential for practical application in complex media was successfully demonstrated in spiked sludge samples collected from three different biogas plants. Thereby, the results obtained by both of the biosensors were in good agreement to the applied reference measurements by photometry and gas chromatography, respectively. The proposed hybrid biosensor system was also used for long-term monitoring of a lab-scale biogas reactor (0.01 m³) for a period of 2 months. In combination with typically monitored parameters, such as gas quality, pH and FOS/TAC (volatile organic acids/total anorganic carbonate), the amperometric measurements of OA and VFA concentration could enhance the understanding of ongoing fermentation processes.
False spectra formation in the differential two-channel scheme of the laser Doppler flowmeter
(2018)
Noise in the differential two-channel scheme of a classic laser Doppler flowmetry (LDF) instrument was studied. Formation of false spectral components in the output signal due to beating of electrical signals in the differential amplifier was found out. The improved block-diagram of the flowmeter was developed allowing to reduce the noise.
The chemical imaging sensor is a semiconductor-based chemical sensor capable of visualizing pH and ion distributions. The spatial resolution depends on the lateral diffusion of photocarriers generated by illumination of the semiconductor substrate. In this study, two types of optical setups, one based on a bundle of optical fibers and the other based on a binocular tube head, were developed to project a hybrid illumination of a modulated light beam and a ring-shaped constant illumination onto the sensor plate. An improved spatial resolution was realized by the ring-shaped constant illumination, which suppressed lateral diffusion of photocarriers by enhanced recombination due to the increased carrier concentration.
Detecting synchronization clusters in multivariate time series via coarse-graining of Markov chains
(2007)
Rationale: Previous studies [Topolnik et al., Cereb Cortex 2003; 13: 883; Schindler et al., Brain 2007; 130: 65] indicate that the termination of focal onset seizures may be causally related to an increase of global neuronal correlation during the second half of the seizures. This increase was observed to occur earlier in complex partial seizures than in secondarily generalized seizures. We here address the question whether such an increase of neuronal correlation prior to seizure end is indeed a global phenomenon, involving both hemispheres or whether there are side-specific differences. Methods: We analyzed 20 focal onset seizures (10 complex partial, 10 secondarily generalized seizures) recorded in 13 patients who underwent presurgical evaluation of focal epilepsies of different origin. EEG was recorded intracranially from bilaterally implanted subdural strip and intrahippocampal depth electrodes. Utilizing a moving window approach, we investigated the evolution of the maximum cross correlation for all channel combinations during seizures. For each moving window the mean value of the maximum cross correlation (MCC) between all electrode contacts was computed separately for each hemisphere. After normalization of seizure durations, MCC values of the ipsi- and contralateral hemisphere for all seizures were determined. Results: We observed that the MCC of the contralateral hemisphere in complex partial seizures increased during the first half of the seizure, whereas, for the same time interval, the MCC of the ipsilateral hemisphere even declined below the level of the pre-seizure period. In contrast, no significant differences between both hemispheres could be observed for secondarily generalized seizures where both hemispheres showed a simultaneous increase of MCC during the second half of the seizures. The level of MCC for the contralateral hemisphere was higher for complex partial seizures than for secondarily generalized seizures during the first half of the seizure. Conclusions: Our findings indicate that there are indeed lateralized differences in the evolution of global neuronal correlation during complex partial and secondarily generalized seizures. The observed contralateral increase of neuronal correlation during complex partial seizures might indicate an emerging self-organizing mechanism for preventing the spread of seizure activity.