Catherine J. Chu
Harvard University
127 Papers
453 Citations
Catherine J. Chu is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Epilepsy. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 91 publications. Previous affiliations of Catherine J. Chu include Partners HealthCare & University of California, San Francisco.
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Papers
Spike ripples localize the epileptogenic zone best: an international intracranial study.
W. Shi,D. Shaw,Katherine G. Walsh,Xue Han,U. T. Eden,Robert M Richardson,Stephen V Gliske,J. Jacobs,Benjamin H Brinkmann,G. Worrell,William C Stacey,B. Frauscher,John Thomas,Mark A. Kramer,Catherine J. Chu +14 more
- 07 Feb 2024
TL;DR: Spike ripples are a reliable and improved biomarker for the epileptogenic zone compared to other leading interictal biomarkers.
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Parent experience of caring for neonates with seizures.
Monica E. Lemmon,Hannah C. Glass,Renée A. Shellhaas,Mary Carol Barks,Bria Bailey,Katie Grant,Lisa Grossbauer,Kamil Pawlowski,Courtney J. Wusthoff,Taeun Chang,Janet S. Soul,Catherine J. Chu,Cameron Thomas,Shavonne L. Massey,Nicholas S. Abend,Elizabeth E. Rogers,Linda S. Franck +16 more
TL;DR: Parents of neonates with seizures face challenges as they adapt to and find meaning in their role as a parent of a child with medical needs, and future interventions should target facilitating parent involvement in clinical and developmental care, improving team consensus and reducing the burden of prognostic uncertainty.
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Microscale dynamics of electrophysiological markers of epilepsy
Jimmy C. Yang,Angelique C. Paulk,Sang Heon Lee,Mehran Ganji,Daniel J. Soper,Pariya Salami,Daniel R. Cleary,Mirela V. Simon,Douglas Maus,Jong Woo Lee,Brian V. Nahed,Pamela S. Jones,Daniel P. Cahill,Garth Rees Cosgrove,Catherine J. Chu,Ziv Williams,Eric Halgren,Shadi A. Dayeh,Sydney S. Cash +18 more
TL;DR: These data suggest micro-domains of irritable cortex that form part of an underlying pathologic architecture that contributes to the seizure network, and point to new possibilities for their use in the diagnosis and treatment of epilepsy.
Associations between Infant and Parent Characteristics and Measures of Family Well-Being in Neonates with Seizures: A Cohort Study
Linda S. Franck,Renée A. Shellhaas,Monica E. Lemmon,Julie Sturza,Janet S. Soul,Taeun Chang,Courtney J. Wusthoff,Catherine J. Chu,Shavonne L. Massey,Nicholas S. Abend,Cameron Thomas,Cameron Thomas,Elizabeth E. Rogers,Charles E. McCulloch,Katie Grant,Lisa Grossbauer,Kamil Pawlowski,Hannah C. Glass,Ronnie Guillet,Marty Barnes,Tammy N. Tsuchida,Adam L. Numis,M. Roberta Cilio,Sonia L. Bonifacio +23 more
TL;DR: Several parent and infant characteristics are associated with poorer parental quality of life and family well-being, and these findings are a call to action to improve mental health screening and services for parents of infants with neonatal seizures.
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Sleep spindles in the healthy brain from birth through 18 years.
Hunki Kwon,Katherine G. Walsh,Erin D. Berja,Dara S. Manoach,Uri T. Eden,Mark A. Kramer,Catherine J. Chu +6 more
TL;DR: In this article , the authors provide age-specific and region-specific normative values for sleep spindles across development, where measures that deviate from these values can be considered pathological.
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