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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2018 Jul 1.
Published in final edited form as: Brain Lang. 2017 Apr 20;170:82–92. doi: 10.1016/j.bandl.2017.03.012

Table 1.

Clinical information for the LTLE patients with atypical and typical language dominance

ID Sex Handedness Age Age of Onset MTS First Language* Medications Seizure Frequency (#/month)
Atypical (A)
A1 F Right 27 13 Yes Vietnamese levetiracetam, lamotrigine 4
A2 F Left 43 6 Yes English carbamazepine, phenobarbital, divalproex sodium 5
A3 F Right 51 5 Yes English levetiracetam, valproid acid, clonazepam 3
A4 F Left 50 40 Yes Spanish carbamezapine 8
A5 F Right 53 5 No English phenytoin, methylphenylbarbital 8
A6 F Right 26 24 No English topiramate, oxcarbezapine 5

Typical (T)
T1 M Right 53 35 Yes English carbamezapine, lamotrigine, levetiracetam 6
T2 M Right 48 38 No English phenytoin, zonisamide, lacosimide 2
T3 M Right 61 33 Yes English lamotrigine, lacosimide, divalproex sodium 10
T4 F Right 35 1 Yes English carbamezapine 10
T5 F Left 33 1.5 No English lamotrigine, lorazepman, phenytoin 5
T6 M Right 33 12 Yes English levetiracetam, lamotrigine 60
T7 F Right 36 18 Yes English and Japanese carbamezapine 30

MTS indicates mesial temporal sclerosis

*

All patients were fluent in English based on a language screening measure