Robert Bradford Duckrow, MD
Associate Research ScientistCards
Appointments
Contact Info
About
Titles
Associate Research Scientist
Biography
Robert Duckrow received his Bachelor of Science Degree from Brown University and his M.D. from the Yale University School of Medicine, followed by a Neurology residency at Yale and a research fellowship in cerebral blood flow and metabolism at the University of Miami, Florida, School of Medicine. At the Pennsylvania State University he studied cerebrovascular mechanisms during ischemia and later the care and study of patients with epilepsy. He was a founding member of the Comprehensive Epilepsy Program and Epilepsy Monitoring Unit at the Milton S. Hershey Medical Center. He moved to the University of Connecticut Health Center and established their inpatient Epilepsy Monitoring Unit while acting as the Director of the Neurophysiology Laboratory. He collaborated with the Yale Epilepsy Program to analyze the intracranial EEG of patients with intractable epilepsy. He joined Yale’s department of Neurology in 2002 as a member of the Epilepsy Program and collaborated with Drs Hitten Zaveri and Susan Spencer on the development of quantitative methods of intracranial EEG analysis, with specific interests in seizure prediction, the interpretation of cerebral electrical fields, and the regional interaction of brain electrical activity during seizure onset and propagation. As a senior epileptologist in the Epilepsy Surgery Program he provided inpatient and outpatient care of patients with medically intractable epilepsy, was the principal investigator of clinical trials to study the safety and efficacy of an implantable neurostimulator system for epilepsy, and provided clinical support to research teams by interpreting and classifying the intracranial EEG data in relation to their specific protocols. Retiring from clinical practice in 2017, he continues to pursue his research interests within the Epilepsy Program.
Appointments
Neurology
Associate Research ScientistPrimary
Other Departments & Organizations
Education & Training
- Research Fellow
- University of Miami School of Medicine (1981)
- Resident
- Yale University School of Medicine (1979)
- Intern
- The Rhode Island Hospital (1976)
- MD
- Yale University (1975)
- BS
- Brown University (1971)
Board Certifications
Neurology
- Certification Organization
- AB of Psychiatry & Neurology
- Original Certification Date
- 1984
Research
Overview
My early contributions to science were in the field of cerebral blood flow and metabolism. At that time, there was considerable interest in the role of hyperglycemia in the evolution of ischemic stroke in humans. Specifically, that it made stroke worse. My initial work found that cerebral blood flow decreased during hyperglycemia and appeared to exclude a causal role of serum osmolality. My subsequent studies eliminated other factors that could explain the finding, including metabolic rate, insulin release, and blood viscosity. Eventually, my application of a continuous laser Doppler blood flow method showed that increased serum osmolality was likely causal and explained the disparity of earlier findings. This work added to the existing body of work on the control of the cerebral circulation. I designed, executed, and reported this work.
Duckrow RB, Beard DC, Brennan RW. (1985) Regional cerebral blood flow decreases during hyperglycemia. Ann. Neurol. 17:267-272
Duckrow RB, Bryan RM. (1987) Regional cerebral glucose utilization during hyperglycemia. J. Neurochem. 48:989-993
Duckrow RB. (1988) Glucose transfer into rat brain during acute and chronic hyperglycemia. Metabolic Brain Disease 3:201-209
Duckrow RB. (1995) Decreased cerebral blood flow during acute hyperglycemia. Brain Res. 703:145-150,
While attempting to develop an acute stroke model, I found an opportunity to study cerebral vascular responses to cortical spreading depression in awake rats. At the time, reports of the blood flow response were variable with the concern that the variation was related to anesthesia. I found that the cerebral blood flow change during spreading depression was related to the baseline flow. This supported the position that eventually became widely accepted. More importantly, by subsequently developing an early form of three-dimensional image reconstruction, I demonstrated the role of nitric oxide synthesis in the modulation of cerebral blood flow during the initial phases of spreading depression. I was the first to report this mechanistic relationship, which was then used by larger groups to address pathophysiological process during acute stroke and migraine headache. I designed, executed, and reported this work.
Duckrow RB. (1991) Regional cerebral blood flow during spreading cortical depression in conscious rats. J. Cereb. Blood Flow Metab. 11:150-154
Duckrow RB. (1993) A brief hypoperfusion precedes spreading depression if nitric oxide synthesis is inhibited. Brain Res. 618:190-195
Analytic methods to measure coincidence and synchronization have been broadly applied to probe brain mechanisms such as synaptic potentiation and feature binding. Accordingly, they have also been applied to questions of seizure onset and propagation in animals and humans. Although correlational and coherence analysis of brain signals began in the 1950s, my work in the field represents an early application coherence analysis to the intracranial EEG of persons with epilepsy in the modern computer era. The central findings supported the concept of information transfer during seizure propagation in mesial temporal lobe structures. I also reported that this transfer did not need to be continuous and separate regions could independently maintain epileptic discharges; a controversial issue at that time. I designed, executed, and reported this work. Continuing collaborative work has included position statements on technical details to provoke a dialog to improve available methods.
Duckrow RB, Spencer SS. (1992) Regional coherence and the transfer of ictal activity during seizure onset in the medial temporal lobe. Electroenceph. clin. Neurophysiol. 82:415-422
Zaveri HP, Duckrow RB, Spencer SS. (2006) On the use of bipolar montages for time-series analysis of intracranial electroencephalograms. Clin. Neurophysiol. 117:2102-2108
Zaveri HP, Duckrow RB, Spencer SS. (2009) Concerning the observation of an electrical potential at a distance from an intracranial electrode contact. Clinical Neurophysiology 120(10):1873-1875
Diagnostic methods to locate and surgical approaches to resect brain tissue responsible for medically intractable epilepsy advanced during the 1980s and 90s. However, surgical failures and a hesitance to resect seizure onset zones that overlapped with areas of critical function spurred the development of implantable neurostimulator systems. Advances in compact signal processors allowed the detection of seizure onset and abortive electrical stimulation of the same region using electrodes on or in the brain. Our group participated in the initial testing of the safety and efficacy of such a device. It was clear from the start that it would provide a novel picture of brain activity by allowing long-term recording of the intracranial EEG in freely moving patients. I was the first to show the potential of this approach by using the device to characterize the daily (circadian) variation in an intracranial EEG feature that correlated with seizure occurrence. This general approach is now the focus of a funding initiative of the Epilepsy Foundation. I was the PI of our site’s participation in the multi-center study of the device, now approved by the FDA, and designed, executed, and reported the work on daily variation.
Duckrow RB, Tcheng TK. (2007) Daily variation in an intracranial EEG feature in humans detected by a responsive neurostimulator system. Epilepsia. 48(8):1614-20
Morrell M, RNS System in Epilepsy Study Group (Duckrow RB, Site Principal Investigator). (2011) Responsive cortical stimulation for the treatment of medically intractable partial epilepsy. Neurology. 77(13):1295-304
Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
Research at a Glance
Yale Co-Authors
Publications Timeline
Research Interests
Hitten Zaveri, PhD
Lawrence Hirsch, MD
Ronald Coifman, PhD
Dennis Spencer, MD
Adithya Sivaraju, MD, MHA
Aline Herlopian, MD
Electroencephalography
Epilepsy, Complex Partial
Publications
2024
Stability of infraslow correlation structure in time-shifted intracranial EEG signals
Joshi R, Duckrow R, Goncharova I, Hirsch L, Spencer D, Godwin D, Zaveri H. Stability of infraslow correlation structure in time-shifted intracranial EEG signals. Frontiers In Network Physiology 2024, 4: 1441294. PMID: 39258030, PMCID: PMC11384574, DOI: 10.3389/fnetp.2024.1441294.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAltmetricConceptsInfraslow activityContact pairsFrequency bandMagnitude-squared coherenceAntiseizure medicationsMedically refractory epilepsy patientsElectrode contact pairsHigher-frequency activityRefractory epilepsy patientsDC-coupled recordingsIcEEG epochsEEG frequency bandsEnvelope correlationOptimal parametersClinical relevanceSeizure riskIntracranial EEGEpilepsy patientsPatientsIntracranial EEG signalsTaperTraditional EEG frequency bands
2022
Cellular recovery after prolonged warm ischaemia of the whole body
Andrijevic D, Vrselja Z, Lysyy T, Zhang S, Skarica M, Spajic A, Dellal D, Thorn SL, Duckrow RB, Ma S, Duy PQ, Isiktas AU, Liang D, Li M, Kim SK, Daniele SG, Banu K, Perincheri S, Menon MC, Huttner A, Sheth KN, Gobeske KT, Tietjen GT, Zaveri HP, Latham SR, Sinusas AJ, Sestan N. Cellular recovery after prolonged warm ischaemia of the whole body. Nature 2022, 608: 405-412. PMID: 35922506, PMCID: PMC9518831, DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-05016-1.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsAltmetricMeSH Keywords and ConceptsConceptsSingle-nucleus transcriptomic analysesSpecific gene expression patternsCellular recoveryGene expression patternsCellular processesMammalian cellsTranscriptomic analysisLarge mammalsExpression patternsCellular repair processesCell deathComprehensive resourceUnderappreciated potentialPhysiological challengesTissue integrityRepair processSpecific changesPorcine brainMammalsOrgansMultiple organs
2021
Artificial neural network trained on smartphone behavior can trace epileptiform activity in epilepsy
Duckrow RB, Ceolini E, Zaveri HP, Brooks C, Ghosh A. Artificial neural network trained on smartphone behavior can trace epileptiform activity in epilepsy. IScience 2021, 24: 102538. PMID: 34308281, PMCID: PMC8257969, DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2021.102538.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsAltmetricVideo quality using outpatient smartphone videos in epilepsy: Results from the OSmartViE study
Tatum WO, Hirsch LJ, Gelfand MA, Acton EK, LaFrance WC, Duckrow RB, Chen D, Blum AS, Hixson J, Drazkowski J, Benbadis S, Cascino GD, Collaborators T. Video quality using outpatient smartphone videos in epilepsy: Results from the OSmartViE study. European Journal Of Neurology 2021, 28: 1453-1462. PMID: 33465822, DOI: 10.1111/ene.14744.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsAltmetricMeSH Keywords and ConceptsConceptsPsychogenic nonepileptic attacksNeurologic eventsEpileptic seizuresInpatient video-electroencephalography (EEG) monitoringPhysiologic nonepileptic eventsMulticenter cohort studyMajority of patientsVideo-electroencephalography monitoringVideo-EEG monitoringSimilar diagnostic accuracyHome video recordingEpilepsy outpatientsNeurological disease statesCohort studyNeurological eventsNonepileptic eventsNonepileptic attacksUnknown diagnosisAdequate durationClinical informationPatientsSenior neurology residentsAccurate diagnosisDiagnostic accuracyNeurology residents
2020
Nine-year prospective efficacy and safety of brain-responsive neurostimulation for focal epilepsy
Nair DR, Laxer KD, Weber PB, Murro AM, Park YD, Barkley GL, Smith BJ, Gwinn RP, Doherty MJ, Noe KH, Zimmerman RS, Bergey GK, Anderson WS, Heck C, Liu CY, Lee RW, Sadler T, Duckrow RB, Hirsch LJ, Wharen RE, Tatum W, Srinivasan S, McKhann GM, Agostini MA, Alexopoulos AV, Jobst BC, Roberts DW, Salanova V, Witt TC, Cash SS, Cole AJ, Worrell GA, Lundstrom BN, Edwards JC, Halford JJ, Spencer DC, Ernst L, Skidmore CT, Sperling MR, Miller I, Geller EB, Berg MJ, Fessler AJ, Rutecki P, Goldman AM, Mizrahi EM, Gross RE, Shields DC, Schwartz TH, Labar DR, Fountain NB, Elias WJ, Olejniczak PW, Villemarette-Pittman NR, Eisenschenk S, Roper SN, Boggs JG, Courtney TA, Sun FT, Seale CG, Miller KL, Skarpaas TL, Morrell MJ. Nine-year prospective efficacy and safety of brain-responsive neurostimulation for focal epilepsy. Neurology 2020, 95: 10.1212/wnl.0000000000010154. PMID: 32690786, PMCID: PMC7538230, DOI: 10.1212/wnl.0000000000010154.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsAltmetricMeSH Keywords and ConceptsMeSH KeywordsAdolescentAdultAgedDepressive DisorderDrug Resistant EpilepsyElectric Stimulation TherapyEpilepsies, PartialFemaleFollow-Up StudiesHumansImplantable NeurostimulatorsIntracranial HemorrhagesMaleMemory DisordersMiddle AgedProspective StudiesProsthesis-Related InfectionsQuality of LifeRandomized Controlled Trials as TopicStatus EpilepticusSudden Unexpected Death in EpilepsySuicideTreatment OutcomeYoung AdultConceptsBrain-responsive neurostimulationQuality of lifeFocal onset seizuresAdverse eventsSeizure frequencyIntractable focal onset seizuresProspective open-label trialOverall QOLOpen-label trialSerious adverse eventsClass IV evidenceMedian percent reductionSudden unexplained deathMedian percent changeSeizure-free periodQOLIE-89SUDEP ratesLabel trialSeizure freedomEpilepsy ratesFocal seizuresOnset seizuresEpilepsy InventoryAcceptable safetyFocal epilepsyBeyond implantation effect? Long-term seizure reduction and freedom following intracranial monitoring without additional surgical interventions
Percy J, Zaveri H, Duckrow RB, Gerrard J, Farooque P, Hirsch LJ, Spencer DD, Sivaraju A. Beyond implantation effect? Long-term seizure reduction and freedom following intracranial monitoring without additional surgical interventions. Epilepsy & Behavior 2020, 111: 107231. PMID: 32615416, DOI: 10.1016/j.yebeh.2020.107231.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsAltmetricMeSH Keywords and ConceptsConceptsLong-term seizure freedomSeizure freedomSeizure frequencyElectrode implantationIntracranial studiesLong-term seizure reductionAdditional surgical interventionSeizure onset localizationIntracranial electroencephalogram monitoringSeizure reductionConsecutive patientsSurgical interventionEpileptogenic networksElectroencephalogram monitoringNeuromodulatory effectsRetrospective analysisIntracranial monitoringTransient improvementDepth electrodesPatientsYear 4ImplantationAdequate dataYearsAssessment of the Predictive Value of Outpatient Smartphone Videos for Diagnosis of Epileptic Seizures
Tatum WO, Hirsch LJ, Gelfand MA, Acton EK, LaFrance WC, Duckrow RB, Chen DK, Blum AS, Hixson JD, Drazkowski JF, Benbadis SR, Cascino GD. Assessment of the Predictive Value of Outpatient Smartphone Videos for Diagnosis of Epileptic Seizures. JAMA Neurology 2020, 77: 593-600. PMID: 31961382, PMCID: PMC6990754, DOI: 10.1001/jamaneurol.2019.4785.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsAltmetricMeSH Keywords and ConceptsConceptsPhysical examination resultsPsychogenic nonepileptic attacksVideo electroencephalogram monitoringEpileptic seizuresVideo electroencephalogramEpilepsy centersPhysical examinationElectroencephalogram monitoringNonepileptic attacksCorrect diagnosisPhysiologic nonepileptic eventsEvaluation of epilepsyExamination resultsMisdiagnosis of epilepsyDiagnostic accuracy studiesPsychogenic attacksMotor signsNonepileptic eventsDefinitive diagnosisPatient historyMAIN OUTCOMEClinic outpatientsPredictive valueSeizuresDiagnosisComparison of Responsive Neurostimulation System Efficacy Between Different Electrographic Seizure Onset Patterns (1255)
Henriquez-Rojas P, Torabi T, Farooque P, Hirsch L, Duckrow R, Herlopian A, Spencer D, Gerrard J, Quraishi I. Comparison of Responsive Neurostimulation System Efficacy Between Different Electrographic Seizure Onset Patterns (1255). Neurology 2020, 94 DOI: 10.1212/wnl.94.15_supplement.1255.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitations
2019
Slowing less than 1 Hz is decreased near the seizure onset zone
Lundstrom BN, Boly M, Duckrow R, Zaveri HP, Blumenfeld H. Slowing less than 1 Hz is decreased near the seizure onset zone. Scientific Reports 2019, 9: 6218. PMID: 30996228, PMCID: PMC6470162, DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-42347-y.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsAltmetricMeSH Keywords and ConceptsConceptsSeizure onset zoneOnset zoneFocal slowingFocal cerebral dysfunctionLocation of dysfunctionFocal epilepsy patientsSlow wave activitySlow oscillationsLocal synaptic strengthsSlow oscillation activityCerebral dysfunctionReduced inhibitory activityPostictal statePostictal slowingEpilepsy patientsModulatory effectsSynaptic strengthDelta frequencyCortical mechanismsIntracranial recordingsDistinct neural mechanismsIntracranial electroencephalographyNeural mechanismsDysfunctionSleep
2018
Seizure susceptibility and infraslow modulatory activity in the intracranial electroencephalogram
Joshi RB, Duckrow RB, Goncharova II, Gerrard JL, Spencer DD, Hirsch LJ, Godwin DW, Zaveri HP. Seizure susceptibility and infraslow modulatory activity in the intracranial electroencephalogram. Epilepsia 2018, 59: 2075-2085. PMID: 30187919, DOI: 10.1111/epi.14559.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsAltmetricMeSH Keywords and ConceptsConceptsAED taperYale-New Haven HospitalAdult epilepsy patientsSeizure forecasting algorithmsElectrode contact pairsSeizure onset areaSeizure susceptibilityClinical recordsDrug taperElectrophysiological changesEpilepsy patientsIntracranial electroencephalographic dataMagnitude-squared coherenceModulatory activitySeizuresPatientsOnset areaPreseizurePostseizureProgressive desynchronizationIntracranial electroencephalogramDaysIctogenesisEffect of timeHospital