for March 2012
The following are accepted papers for the upcoming January publication, but not yet printed.
BRIEF COMMUNICATIONS
- Title-Spinal Epidural Arteriovenous Fistula with Double Perimedullary Reflux
- Outcomes of Nerve Transfer Versus Nerve Graft in Ulnar Nerve Laceration
- A Novel Exon 3 Mutation (P66S) in the SOD1 Gene in Familial ALS
- Proven or Unproven? Panel Report on Ethics in the Translation of Neuroscience
- Autoantibody Associated Disorders of the CNS in Children: The List Keeps Growing
COMMENTARY
HISTORICAL REVIEW
EDITORIAL
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
- Atypical Multiple Lipomatosis as Sole Manifestation of a Mitochondrial Disorder
- Steroid-Dependant Idiopathic Caseating Intracranial Granuloma
- Paraneoplastic Anti-HU Syndrome Associated with Uterine Tumor
- Spontaneous Occlusion of the Temporal AVM Associated with Tinnitus
NEUROIMAGING HIGHLIGHT
- Cerebral Abscess Crossing Midline
OBITUARY
ORIGINAL ARTICLE
- Eye Exercises for Treatment of Idiopathic Cranial nerve VII Paresis: Pilot Study
- Iron Deficiency Anemia Prevalence at First Stroke or Transient Ischemic Attack
- Treatment Comfort of Adult Neurologists in Childhood Onset Conditions
- Surgery for Unruptured Intracranial Aneurysms in the ISAT and ISUIA Era
- Multiple Sclerosis Fatique is Associated with Reduced Psychomotor Vigilance
- Pathologic Evaluation of the Supraoptic and Paraventricular Nuclei in Dementia
- Serum-Positive and -Negative AQP4 Antibody NMO in Chinese Patients
- Health Status, Stress and Life Satisfaction in a Community Population with MS
- Patients Referred for TIA May Still Have Persisting Neurological Deficits
- A Novel PLP1 Mutation Further Expands the Clinical Heterogeneity at the Locus
- Effects of Creatine and Exercise on Skeletal Muscle of FRG1-Transgenic Mice
- Increased Intestinal Permeability and Parkinson Disease Patients: Chicken or Egg?
REVIEW ARTICLE
- Status Epilepticus" A Review, With Emphasis on Refractory Cases
- Autoimmune Encephalopathies and Epilepsies in Children and Teenagers
- Stem Cell in Brain Tumour Development and Therapy - Two Sides of the Same Coin
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