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Query: UMLS:C0014547 (focal epilepsy)
1,627 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Severe persistent neuropsychological disorders sometimes develop in the course of a focal epilepsy of unknown origin in previously normal children. Very frequent bilateral focal or generalized discharges are often noted on the sleep EEG records of these patients with no evidence of clinical seizures. The relation between these paroxysms and the observed deterioration remains unclear. We report a child with a partial complex epilepsy and severe disturbances of language, cognition, and behavior acquired in the early years of development who was followed for 15 years. A correlation between the evolution of the striking EEG abnormalities during sleep and the neuropsychological disorders could be established retrospectively. The observed sequence of onset and recovery of the aphasia, the dementia, and the "psychotic" behavior makes a direct causal relation between the deficits quite unlikely. Rather it suggests an association of independent symptoms with a specific language disorder becoming manifest in the course of the evolution. This child shows many of the main characteristics of the syndromes of "acquired aphasia with convulsive disorder" (Landau-Kleffner syndrome) and "epilepsy with continuous spike waves during sleep." Both syndromes describe probably different facets of a similar underlying, still unexplained cerebral dysfunction.
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PMID:Acquired aphasia, dementia, and behavior disorder with epilepsy and continuous spike and waves during sleep in a child. 171 72

The Gamma Knife is currently the only radiosurgical device which has been used in functional neurosurgery. This mode of utilization is possible because the instrument can make lesions in normal brains with a volume as small as 50 mm3. The experience of functional radiosurgery accumulated at the Karolinska Institute over 21 years is reviewed, and the possible implications of the new developments in imaging techniques for the future of functional radiosurgery are considered. The review covers gamma thalamotomy for pain and tremor, radiosurgery for trigeminal neuralgia, gamma capsulotomy for severe anxiety and obsessive-compulsive neurosis, and Gamma Knife surgery for focal epilepsy. The important role of stereotactic MRI localization in functional radiosurgery is pointed out, and a preliminary report of the recent experience with stereotactic magnetoencephalography combined with stereotactic MRI for physiological and anatomic target localization is given. It is concluded that functional radiosurgery should only be performed with radiation of very small volumes of brain, as the very high doses required would be devastating if delivered to even small volumes.
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PMID:Functional neurosurgery--a future for the gamma knife? 172 60

Cerebral single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), a method of functional brain imaging, measures cerebral blood flow and metabolism. This paper describes the imaging procedure and several cases where cerebral SPECT was of use in the differential diagnosis of medically ill patients who also presented with psychopathology. SPECT patterns in cerebrovascular disease, dementia, focal epilepsy, and AIDS are at present the best described and seem to be the most specific. Often changes in regional cerebral blood flow are seen before structural changes become apparent on CT or MRI. Cerebral SPECT can add valuable diagnostic information in assessing psychopathology in the medically ill and can often lead to changes in treatment.
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PMID:The role of SPECT brain imaging in assessing psychopathology in the medically ill. 174 99

We report the results of a clinical trial of Magnetoencephalography (MEG) on spike foci in patients with epilepsy, which was performed from December 1990 to June 1991 at The University of Tokyo Hospital. Fifty patients with focal epilepsy; 26 primary epilepsy, 24 secondary epilepsy (7 brain tumor, 4 arteriovenous malformation, 4 encephalitis, 3 porencephaly, 2 arachnoid cyst, 1 brain abscess, 1 hemimegaloencephaly, 1 Lance-Adams syndrome, 1 hygroma), and ten normal subjects were enrolled in this study. MEG data were recorded using a 37-channel biomagnetometer system SMI-1001 (BTi Magnes, Biomagnetic Technologies, Inc., San Diego). A simultaneous 19-channel EEG recording with linked-ear reference was also obtained. The overall study was completed safely and none of the normal subjects showed abnormal paroxysmal MEG activity. Two patients showed interictal EEG spikes which would not have been noticed without first noting the presence of corresponding prominent MEG spikes. On the whole, the MEG signal seemed to have a wider frequency bandwidth than EEG. In most cases, the source localization predicted by MEG corresponded well with the EEG findings. The relative accuracy of MEG spike source localization was estimated to be within a cubic centimeter from the cases which showed tightly clustered localization of individual spikes. High-pass filtering reduced interference by superimposed slow wave activity, thereby improving the localization of spike sources. These results demonstrate that 37-channel biomagnetometer system could be a useful tool for analyzing epileptic spike sources.
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PMID:[Magnetoencephalographic studies on spike foci using a 37-channel biomagnetometer system]. 176 94

Wilder Penfield's development of surgical methods for treating focal cerebral seizures, beginning with his early work in Montreal in 1928, is reviewed. The reliance on seizure pattern and focal brain pathology was enormously enhanced by the advent of EEG and direct electrical recording from the cortex during surgery. The recognition in the early 1950's of mesial temporal structures in the pathogenesis of temporal lobe epilepsy with automatism lead to more rational and successful surgical treatment. Positron emission tomography and especially magnetic resonance imaging have recently added to the essential diagnostic information of focal epilepsy provided by EEG.
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PMID:Development of surgical therapy of epilepsy at the Montreal Neurological Institute. 177 66

Immunocytochemical studies have identified alterations in GABA neurons in several models of seizure disorders. However, the changes have varied among different epilepsy models, and these variations presumably reflect the diversity of mechanisms that can lead to seizure disorders. In models of cortical focal epilepsy, there is strong evidence for decreases in the number of GABAergic elements, and the changes closely parallel the time course of seizure development. By contrast, in some genetic models of epilepsy, increases in the number of immunocytochemically-detectable neurons have been observed in selected brain regions. In several models of temporal lobe epilepsy, there presently is little immunocytochemical evidence for alterations of GABA neurons within the hippocampal formation despite physiological demonstrations of decreased GABA-mediated inhibition in this region. However, it remains possible that certain types of GABA neurons could be differentially affected in some seizure disorders while other types are preserved. Thus, distinguishing between different classes of GABA neurons and determining their functional roles represent major challenges for future studies of GABA neurons in seizure disorders.
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PMID:GABA neurons in seizure disorders: a review of immunocytochemical studies. 178 31

A review of the electroencephalographs of 351 epileptic patients admitted to the Ahmadu Bello University Teaching Hospital, Kaduna from March, 1982 to November, 1984 is presented. Those under 20 years age group predominated in the cohort studied. The frequencies of generalised epilepsy and partial epilepsy were almost equal. Partial epilepsy with complex symptomatology was common and petit mal was relatively rare. The inter-ictal EEG record was normal in 35.6% who were usually young and presumably suffered from idiopathic epilepsy. Differences existing in the EEG records reported and those reported in Nigeria and elsewhere are discussed. The need for an epidemiological study of the general population in the Northern Nigeria is emphasized.
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PMID:Electroencephalographic abnormalities in 351 Nigerians with epilepsy. 179 Jan 27

Cerebral distribution of Tc99m-hexamethylprolenaminoxim (HMPAO) was investigated using single photon emission computerized tomography (SPECT) in 34 patients with primary generalized epilepsy (PGE) during the interictal state. These findings were compared with those in a control group of 9 healthy volunteers. In control subjects uniform selective uptake of HMPAO in cortex, basal ganglia and thalamus was found. In 30 patients (88%) decreased regional perfusion was found as follows: in the cortical region in 6 patients (18%), in the region of the basal ganglia or thalamus in 7 (20%), and in both regions in 17 patients (50%). Four patients had normal SPECT findings. The obtained results permit a hypothesis that the PGE should not be strictly differentiated from the focal epilepsy. A possible explanation of the pathophysiology of PGE has also been discussed.
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PMID:Regional brain perfusion changes in patients with primary generalized epilepsy assessed by Tc99m HM-PAO and SPECT. 181 Mar 93

Both interictal and ictal EEG phenomena are commonly activated by functional instability. The different non-REM sleep stages comprise long-lasting periods of cyclic alternating pattern (CAP) in which arousal fluctuates between 'A phases' of greater arousal and 'B phases' of less arousal, and periods in which vigilance maintains a tonic stability (non-CAP). Previous studies have revealed that phase A induces a marked enhancement of generalized EEG paroxysms, a minor though significant activation of focal lesional bursts, but no effect on rolandic functional spikes. Conversely, phase B exerts an inhibitory modulation, especially on bilateral interictal phenomena. Because of the opposite influence of phase A and phase B also on muscle tone, we assessed the amount and distribution of nocturnal partial motor seizures in 6 subjects affected by focal epilepsy. The polysomnograms included 45 motor seizures, 43 of which occurred during non-REM sleep. Nocturnal fits were significantly more frequent in stages 1 and 3 (P less than 0.0001). Among the non-REM seizures, 42 appeared in CAP (P less than 0.0001) and always in phase A. The transient arousal and the concomitant muscle tone activation expressed by phase A of CAP is likely to support the motor components of nocturnal seizures. Sleep analysis in terms of CAP and non-CAP provides a better understanding of the continuum from subclinical EEG paroxysms to clinical manifestations and of the relations between vigilance and seizure disorders.
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PMID:Activation of partial seizures with motor signs during cyclic alternating pattern in human sleep. 181 56

Despite great histological polymorphism, clinical features of supratentorial brain tumors are mainly limited to neurological deficit, and focal epilepsy and/or symptoms secondary to raised intracranial pressure. The treatment relies on surgery and radiotherapy; chemotherapy has not yet demonstrated its efficacy. Failures are explained by the limitation of neurosurgery, and by the toxicity of the radiotherapy that precludes the use of high dosages. Some good vital results are hampered by neuropsychic sequellae.
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PMID:[Hemispheric tumors]. 185 Dec 90


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