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Query: UMLS:C0014547 (
focal epilepsy
)
1,627
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Clinical improvement in
epilepsy
following temporal lobectomy is more often obtained when an abnormality is found on subsequent histological examination. Pre-operative MRI demonstrated an abnormal signal in the temporal lobe of a patient with pathologically proven mesial temporal sclerosis with microvascular anomaly. MRI may therefore be helpful in the selection of patients for temporal lobectomy. MRI findings of 12 patients with resistant
focal epilepsy
are reviewed. A wide range of T1 and T2 weighting is suggested to maximise selection of patients.
...
PMID:Magnetic resonance imaging in the management of resistant focal epilepsy: pathological case report and experience of 12 cases. 312 96
To investigate the relationship between
epilepsy
and hemispheric asymmetries for language, a dual-task procedure was used to assess language lateralization in children with benign rolandic childhood
epilepsy
. In the sample selection, care was taken to include factors believed to influence both the mental capabilities of epileptic patients and the individual functional cerebral organization. Results suggest that the interhemispheric prevalence pattern is related to the focus site. Controls as well as epileptic patients with a right hemispheric focus showed the expected left language lateralization; conversely, children with a left unilateral focus showed a different pattern of functional representation, suggesting an involvement of the right hemisphere in language mechanisms. It is emphasized that this atypical cerebral organization is found in subjects with no structural lesion and no therapy. It seems likely that the presence of a focal epileptic activity itself can alter the cerebral mechanisms underlying cognitive functions. A relationship between this modified hemispheric specialization and subtle neuropsychological dysfunctions observed in the children with
focal epilepsy
is suggested.
...
PMID:Language lateralization in children with benign partial epilepsy. 312 11
Brain single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) was performed in 16 patients with
focal epilepsy
, as well as EEG, using 99m Tc-HM-PAO SPECT and a rotating gamma camera system. Pathological Tc-HM-PAO SPECT findings were registered in 75%. CT was positive in 25%. MRI was positive in 76%. The results of Tc-HM-PAO SPECT findings were compared with those of CT and MRI. 61% of the MRI findings correlated with the pathological SPECT findings with respect to the side of the hemisphere, and in 75% of the patients the focal EEG abnormality and the pathological Tc-HM-PAO-SPECT findings were localized in the same hemisphere.
Epilepsy
Res 1987 Mar
PMID:Initial experience with 99m Tc-hexamethyl-propylene amine oxime (HM-PAO) single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) in patients with focal epilepsy. 314 47
Serum immunoglobulins, T-lymphocyte subsets and HLA investigations were carried out in 24 patients with focal, mainly temporal lobe,
epilepsy
and in 30 of their first degree relatives. The mean serum level of IgA was significantly decreased in the epileptic probands compared with controls. In the relatives, there was a significant decrease in mean IgM levels. The epileptic group had significantly fewer circulating T4 "helper" lymphocytes (absolute and percent) and an increased percentage of T8 "cytotoxic"/"suppressor" lymphocytes than the controls. The effect of antiepileptic drug treatment on these results is discussed. The frequencies of 63 HLA specificities determined were not significantly different in probands compared with controls. Among 5 of the most commonly occurring haplotypes there was a lower frequency of the haplotype A1,B8 in epileptic probands, which is in accordance with an earlier study on benign
focal epilepsy
in children. The immunological findings support the possibility that
focal epilepsy
may be linked to a genetically dependent immune dysregulation. The latter may contribute to the variability underlying the multifactorial inheritance of the epilepsies.
...
PMID:Immunological studies in focal epilepsy. 314 8
Organic solvent exposure was studied in 104 cases of idiopathic
focal epilepsy
and 312 matched referents. Exposure to solvents was classified as O, I, II, or III on the basis of occupational codes. The relative risk (RR) of
epilepsy
for those in exposure class I, II, or III, relative to O, was estimated using conditional logistic regression. An increasing trend in RR was observed with higher exposure classes. The attributable risk for cases with
focal epilepsy
of deep hemispherical origin was estimated to be 8%.
...
PMID:Focal epilepsy and exposure to organic solvents: a case-referent study. 314 26
Recently, an immunocytochemical method using glutaraldehyde fixation and an antiserum developed against a GABA--glutaraldehyde--protein conjugate has permitted direct visualization of GABAergic structures in the brains of perfused animals. This paper reports a successful use of this technique on human temporal cortex fixed by immersion. The cerebral tissue was obtained from patients operated for
focal epilepsy
. GABA-positive somata, fibres and terminals are observed in all layers of the temporal cortex. Terminals are particularly abundant in the superficial portion of layer I and in layers II, III and IV. Dense plexuses of fibres are located in layers II, III, IV and VI and in the underlying white matter. Somata are found in all cortical layers and in the underlying white matter; they are round, oval, fusiform or triangular and exhibit a multipolar, bitufted or bipolar dendritic pattern. This technique for the visualization of GABAergic structures in the human brain may allow a better understanding of the pathogeny of
epilepsy
in which the GABAergic transmission has been implicated.
...
PMID:Immunocytochemical detection of GABAergic nerve cells in the human temporal cortex using a direct gamma-aminobutyric acid antiserum. 328 56
The clinical seizure pattern, particularly the initial phenomena, plus the EEG, when satisfactory recording of the seizure onset can be achieved, determine the primary localization of epileptic phenomena. The EEG has also demonstrated, by the presence of interictal epileptiform spike discharges, the presence of a second-order localization of epileptic phenomena, namely, the location and extent of cortex adjacent to the site of origin of the neuronal seizure discharge that is recruited into action in a clinical
epileptic seizure
. Experience with cortical resection in the treatment of
focal epilepsy
has demonstrated the importance of a third-order localization of epileptic phenomena, namely, how much of the potentially epileptogenic cortex must be excised in order to produce a satisfactory reduction of the seizure tendency.
...
PMID:Localizational concepts in epilepsy: past, present and future. 345 Feb 41
Forty-nine children and adolescents whose seizures reportedly worsened while receiving carbamazepine (CBZ) were studied retrospectively. Twenty-six patients met criteria for excellent documentation of carbamazepine-exacerbated seizures. Four epileptic syndromes were particularly affected: childhood absence
epilepsy; focal
symptomatic, frontal lobe
epilepsy
; Lennox-Gastaut syndrome; and severe myoclonic
epilepsy
of infancy. Eight of the 26 patients developed new-onset absence seizures and three patients with established absence
epilepsy
experienced absence status. Other seizure types, including atonic, tonic-clonic, and myoclonic, developed in eight patients treated with CBZ, and new generalized spike-and-wave discharges were observed in electroencephalograms of nine patients. CBZ is a widely used, effective antiepileptic drug, particularly for partial or partial complex seizures; however, if uncontrolled, generalized seizures occur after CBZ is prescribed for children or adolescents with absence or mixed seizures, a trial of CBZ discontinuation is warranted. The data reported here do not permit calculation of the incidence of this phenomenon.
...
PMID:Carbamazepine-exacerbated epilepsy in children and adolescents. 350 8
Wet dog shake behavior was studied in different models of
epilepsy
in the rat. Numerous wet dog shakes were associated with limbic seizures in the course of
focal epilepsy
induced by kindling stimulations or local injections of kainic or quisqualic acid and progressively disappeared during generalization. On the contrary, they were never observed in models of generalized
epilepsy
. This study suggests that the number of wet dog shakes may be an index of the progression of limbic seizures toward generalization.
...
PMID:Wet dog shakes in limbic versus generalized seizures. 354 45
Thirty-seven cases that showed bilateral basal ganglia calcification (BGC) were found in 5987 patients. These cases (0.6%) were studied in relation to their CT findings, underlying diseases and
epilepsy
. CT findings of BGC were divided into "localized" type (33 cases) and "diffuse" type (4 cases). The number of patients with the "localized" type clearly seemed to increase with age. The M:F ratio of the "localized" type was 1:2. The "localized" type was seen in both idiopathic BGC and familial BGC. The "diffuse" type was seen in hypoparathyroidism only. The specific relationship of these two types of BGC to underlying diseases, however, does not fully agree with results so far reported. We experienced a case with familial BGC during this study that appears to be only the 15th so far reported.
Partial epilepsy
occurred in 75% of
epilepsy
with BGC, but there seemed to be no direct relationship between BGC and epileptogenicity.
...
PMID:A survey of 37 cases with basal ganglia calcification (BGC): CT-scan findings of BGC and its relationship to underlying diseases and epilepsy. 357 76
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