Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0014547 (focal epilepsy)
1,627 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Retrospective analysis of the psychiatric diagnoses in a group of patients surgically relieved of medically intractable epilepsy tested the hypothesis that patients with left-sided temporal lobe epileptogenic lesions are at greater risk for the development of a so-called schizophrenic-like psychosis than are those with right-sided temporal lobe epileptogenic lesions. The data confirmed the hypothesis and also demonstrated an increased prevalence of sinistrals in the psychotic group. Thus, epilepsy involving the dominant hemisphere at the inception of the seizure disorder is the significant risk factors. The data also indicated that a psychosis is unlikely to develop in patients with other (nontemporal) forms of focal epilepsy. On the basis of these data and data from other studies, the prevalence of psychosis in patients with poorly controlled temporal lobe epilepsy was estimated to be approximately 10% to 15%.
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PMID:Prevalence of psychosis in epilepsy as a function of the laterality of the epileptogenic lesion. 681 52

Interictal EEGs were studied in 100 children, ages 3 to 15 years. Records were interpreted independent of history; 89% were normal, 9% had benign focal epileptiform discharges (BFEDC), one had temporal spikes, and one had background slowing. The nine patients with BFEDC did not differ from the others. None had epilepsy. This incidence of 9% is higher (p less than 0.0001) than the incidence of BFEDC in the normal population (1.9%). The significance of this finding is not clear, but migraine and benign focal epilepsy of childhood may be genetically linked, or the vascular abnormality of migraine may cause brain injury to produce sharp waves of low epileptogenicity. These results do not suggest that headaches are epileptic.
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PMID:Benign focal epileptiform discharges in childhood migraine (BFEDC). 681 63

Forty patients with nontumoral epileptogenic lesions who have undergone cortical excision of portions of the frontal lobe for the relief of medically refractory focal epilepsy at the Montreal Neurological Institute during the period 1930-1971 have become and remained seizure free for a minimum period of 5 years (median follow-up 14 years). It seems logical to assume that, in these patients, the essential seizure-producing mechanisms were contained in the excised portions of the frontal lobe and such patients thus represent a pure culture of frontal lobe epilepsy. The clinical, radiological, EEG, surgical, and pathological findings were analyzed. The variability in the clinical pictures and EEG data gives ample testimony of the complex and varied patterns of spread of epileptiform discharges through the brain in patients with epileptiform lesions of the frontal lobe. The data presented also bear on two secondary localizational aspects of frontal lobe epilepsy: (a) how much cortex must be recruited into epileptiform discharge to produce recurring seizures, and (b) how much of the total potentially epileptogenic cortex must be removed to produce a satisfactory reduction of the seizure tendency. These data also emphasize the importance of improving the accuracy of our methods of evaluating these secondary and tertiary localizational aspects of epileptic phenomena.
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PMID:Characteristics of a pure culture of frontal lobe epilepsy. 687 5

The cortical somatosensory evoked potential (SEP) of the rat, evoked by contralateral forepaw stimulation, consisted of early (P 1 and N 1) and the late components (P 2 and N 2). Microelectrode recording yielded evoked unitary responses of short latencies in the range of the early components and responses of longer latencies in the range of P 2. During the development of focal epilepsy after topical application of penicillin, the late components of SEP were enhanced and the enhanced late negativity corresponded to a surface negative cortical spike. The prominent enlargement of later components was associated with prolonged, often recurrent discharges of long latency unitary responses and with enlarged local field potentials. Early components of SEP remained relatively unaffected and so did unitary responses with short latencies. Epileptic spike-conditioned SEPs in the cuneate nucleus, thalamic sensory relay nucleus and sensory cortex were depressed from 100 ns (cuneate nucleus) to about 300 ms (thalamus and cortex) subsequent to spike discharge. Transmission in the cuneate nucleus was least affected. Thalamic and cortical early components of SEP had similar time courses of recovery, which differed markedly from hat of cortical late components. Our findings suggest that two different neuronal activities generate different components of SEP and are differentially involved in the epileptic activities, which results in the different amplitude recovery following spontaneous epileptic spike discharges.
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PMID:The effects of focal epileptic activity on the somatosensory evoked potentials in the rat. 731 37

In former investigations on human focal epilepsy and on experimental epilepsy by cobalt implantation, the authors have demonstrated the signaletic importance of "activated astrocytes": cortical astrocytes endowed with a modified metabolism and an accelerated turnover. The present study concerns the results of the intra-amygdaloid injections of kainic acid, a strong excitatory and neurotoxic amino acid. Injections in semi-chronic conditions in the rat lead to electrical and motor seizures and to the production of activated astrocytes not only in regions that might trigger off epileptic seizures (cerebral cortex, amygdala, possibly hippocampus), but also in the neostriatum. Stimulation of this last region results in a Huntington chorea-like syndrome. Thus, the importance of activated astrocytes must be extended to include other conditions of intense hyperactivity of neurons than epilepsy.
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PMID:[Histochemical study of central nervous system lesions in experimental epilepsy caused by kainic acid]. 732 58

Effects of GABOB on experimental induced epileptiform activities. Antiepileptic activity of gamma-amino-beta-hydroxybutyric acid (GABOB) has been tested on different models of either generalized or focal epilepsy induced by penicillin in cat. In acute experiments, topical application to the cortex of GABOB (from 1% to 10%) during feline generalized epilepsy produced a reverse in polarity of the spike and wave complex, while in the so called "epileptogenic corticopathy" it induced a decrease in voltage as well as in frequency of the bilateral spikes and polyspikes. A similar effect was seen after parenteral injection of GABOB in acute preparations in which a penicillin focus was created. In chronic animals, in which feline generalized penicillin epilepsy had been produced, a single i.v. injection of GABOB induced a significant decrease of the epileptic bursts during the first 30' after the antiepileptic drug was injected. Finally in 4 animals chronic administration of GABOB leaded to a mean decrease of the epileptic bursts higher than 50%. These data support the antiepileptic activity of GABOB. However the high doses used in this study to achieve the antiepileptic effect could make difficult its use in human patients.
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PMID:[Effect of gamma-amino-beta-hydroxybutyric acid (GABHB) on experimentally-induced epileptic activity]. 746 21

The initial objective of the present study was to investigate the role of excitatory and inhibitory amino acids in generalized as compared to focal epilepsy, both forms being induced by the same convulsant agent, i.e. penicillin. Our attempts to obtain in the rat the generalized epilepsy, constantly induced in cats by systemic administration of penicillin, were unsuccessful. This is probably due to the rudimentary development of the cerebral cortex in rodents as compared to the feline cortex. The tentative conclusion was drawn that the cortex is the brain structure mainly involved in the genesis of petit mal seizures. Penicillin was applied to the cortex of 40 white Wistar rats and the electrical cortical activity was registered. The concentrations of glutamate, aspartate, glycine, GABA and serine were determined in the cerebral cortex, the brain stem and the cerebellum. The same amino acids were determined in the brain of 20 controls. No significant changes in the amino acid contents were obtained in the cerebral cortex. In the brain stem the glutamate level was significantly increased while the glycine content was markedly decreased. These findings are consistent with the involvement of the brain stem structures in seizure activity.
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PMID:Amino acid content of the brain in rats focal penicillin induced epilepsy. 754 74

When a focal epilepsy proves refractory to medical therapy, surgical treatment is available and increasingly used. Most interventions consist of focal cortical resections, and by far the most common operation is a temporal lobectomy. The presurgical evaluation is complex and multidisciplinary. It includes clinical evaluation, EEG-video monitoring, neuropsychological testing, and structural as well as functional imaging. When surface EEG fails to identify the epileptogenic zone with sufficient confidence, several invasive methods are available, each with its advantages and limitations. In addition to neurophysiologic data, when there is convergence of structural imaging (MRI) and functional testing (Wada test, neuropsychological evaluation, nuclear imaging), a single focus can be identified, and a focal resection is likely to be successful. Surgery is a well-accepted and effective therapeutic modality for patients with refractory epilepsy. When surgical candidates are selected appropriately, results are excellent, especially for temporal lobe epilepsy.
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PMID:Evaluation for surgical treatment of partial epilepsy: an overview. 757 98

Lamotrigine (LTG) has recently been approved for marketing in Australia as add-on therapy in resistant partial seizure disorders. Early reports cited a therapeutic blood level for LTG of 1-3 mg/L (4-12 mumol/L). Aspects of routine patient care with LTG, devoid of the restrictions of trial protocols, are discussed. Forty-five patients commenced therapy but 15 discontinued LTG. Of the remaining 30 patients, 9 became seizure free, 3 from the de novo trial in focal epilepsy and 6 with generalised epilepsy. Global evaluation of patients showed mild to moderate improvement for those with focal epilepsy and moderate to marked improvement for those with generalised epilepsy. Blood levels of LTG did not provide clinically useful information.
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PMID:Routine use of lamotrigine, a new anti-epileptic medication, and the value of measuring its blood levels. 758 66

Between 1982 and 1991, 11 patients (4 male, 7 female) ranging in age from 16 to 42 years who had been diagnosed with idiopathic focal epilepsy resistant to medication, were treated with stereotactic radiosurgery. The preoperative symptomatic period was 3-24 years. The process of localizing epileptic focus was based on chronic electrocorticography with flexible electrodes introduced into the subarachnoid space through single burr holes, and left in place during a maximum of 7 days until a clinical seizure was recorded. In most cases the procedure had to be repeated until localization was clear. This process was aided by a computer-assisted automatic analysis procedure. Final confirmation of focus location was done with depth electrode recording in most cases. Stereotactic radiosurgery was performed with a 60Co gamma source using 10 mm collimators, except in two cases in which a betatron was used. The estimated dose was 10-20 Gy at the isocenter. Four of the 11 patients (36%) were medication- and seizure-free after a mean follow-up of 102.5 months. Five patients (45%) presented a reduction of seizures of 98, 89, 86, 75 and 75%, respectively. Two patients did not respond to treatment. Seizure reduction began after a delay period of 2-12 months except in 2 patients and in most cases seizure rate decreased progressively during several months (range: 3-48) postoperatively until stabilization. No complications related to irradiation were recorded. Doses effective for epilepsy are much lower than those for producing cerebral lesions, so the mechanism is not destruction of the focus of the pathways spreading the epileptic activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Stereotactic radiosurgery may be effective in the treatment of idiopathic epilepsy: report on the methods and results in a series of eleven cases. 762 46


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