“…Other syndromes are more common in males (e.g., Ohtahara syndrome, infantile spasms [IS], Lennox–Gastaut syndrome, Landau–Kleffner syndrome, and febrile seizures), with males exhibiting an overall incidence of seizures and prevalence of epilepsy slightly greater than that of females. Additional studies have demonstrated sex-specific patterns of seizure susceptibility, laterality, and generalization; brain regional dysfunction between ictal periods; and seizure-associated neuronal injury in epileptic disorders, such as temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) (Veliskova and Desantis, 2013)[Perucca, Camfield, et al, in this issue][Scheffer and Gecz, in this issue][Savic and Engel, in this issue][McCarthy and Kight, in this issue][Moshe and Giorgi, in this issue][Galanopoulou and Akman, in this issue][Jones et al, in this issue][vanLuijtelaar et al, in this issue][Scharfman, in this issue][Harden and Koppel, in this issue][Reddy, in this issue][Perucca, Tomson, et al, in this issue][Pitkanen, in this issue]. There is also emerging evidence that common pathological features in epilepsy syndromes are linked with sex differences, such as subtle distinctions in white matter associated with hippocampal sclerosis that can be identified in patients with TLE with diffusion tensor imaging (Oguz et al, 2013).…”