Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0014547 (
focal epilepsy
)
1,627
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Stereotactic implantation of deep SEEG electrodes performed as a prelude to surgery in some patients with drug-resistant
focal epilepsy
requires previous "in vivo" identification and localization of the cortical and subcortical structures to be explored, visualized "semi-directly" "or directly" by neuroradiological imaging techniques. Stereoscopic stereotactic teleangiography is a safety factor in transcutaneous electrode implantation and biopsies, but it also localizes the cortical sulci in a "semi-direct" manner by identifying vascular segments deeply buried in this sulci, which constitute their lamina vascularis. Although RMI greatly contributes to the study of the pallium, visualizing fragments of sulci and gyri does not necessarily mean that these structures can be identified with certainty, notably on the convexity of the brain. To solve this problem, RMI sections are enlarged by a photographic process, then combined with the images obtained from neuroradiological stereotaxis by means of anatomical landmarks that are common to both types of documents, using the bicommissural reference systems, bicallosal l/nl or vascular segments. This enables the angiographic laminae vascularis, which define the sulci in a "semi-direct" manner, to be used a kind of "Ariadne's clew" to identify cortical structures on RMI sections. In percutaneous stereotactic electrode implantation, the choice of the trajectories results from a compromise between the need to reach the desired anatomical structures, identified and localized within the stereotactic space, and the necessity to avoid the blood vessels displayed by stereoangiography. In some cases, the accuracy of anatomical definition can be verified during the SEEG study and/or by the evoked potential technique. Once the electrodes have been removed, their traces can be identified in a control RMI examination which constitutes a further verification.
...
PMID:Methodology of "in vivo" anatomical study and stereo-electroencephalographic exploration in brain surgery for epilepsy. 212 98
Electrical measurements of epileptiform cellular currents in a penicillin model of
focal epilepsy
were directly compared to the extracranial magnetic fields these currents produce. Our data support the hypothesis that epileptiform magnetic fields result from intradendritic currents oriented perpendicular to the cortical surface. Furthermore, magnetic fields could be detected from epileptic foci smaller than 3 mm2. This work provides an empirical foundation for physical models with which to interpret noninvasive neuromagnetic recordings of epileptic discharge in human focal seizure disorders.
...
PMID:The electrophysiological basis of epileptiform magnetic fields in neocortex. 212 18
A night-time polygraphic sleep recording was performed in 14 patients with late onset partial epilepsy receiving chronic carbamazepine monotherapy. All patients had unstable nocturnal sleep patterns as indicated by significantly altered sleep continuity parameters compared with normal controls. Patients with poor seizure control tended to show greater alterations of sleep stability compared to patients in complete clinical remission but the difference failed to reach statistical significance. Epileptic patients also showed less REM sleep and longer REM latencies compared with normal controls, the most altered REM values being observed in patients with poor seizure control. These data confirm that polygraphic sleep alterations are seen in patients with symptomatic
focal epilepsy
and indicate that these abnormalities occur irrespective of seizure recurrence.
...
PMID:Sleep patterns in patients with late onset partial epilepsy receiving chronic carbamazepine (CBZ) therapy. 212 55
Seventy patients with intractable epilepsy were surgically treated. Thirty-three patients underwent a stereotactic procedure and in all as a first-stage operation fornicotomy was performed. Because of inadequate results in 14 patients, an additional stereotactic intervention was necessary; the targets were amygdala, thalamus, and Forel's H-field, and the final outcome of these patients was 9 (27%) seizure-free, 19 (58%) improved, and 5 (15%) unchanged. In 3 patients a selective amygdalo-hippocampectomy was performed with 2 seizure-free patients and one with improvement. Topectomy in
focal epilepsy
in 5 patients resulted in freedom from seizures in all cases. In 23 patients a lobectomy was performed; 10 (43%) were seizures-free, 8 (35%) were improved, and 5 (22%) were unchanged. In 6 patients only a pathological lesion was resected. Our results speak in favour of ablative surgery. However, stereotactic operations are indicated in cases with secondary generalization and dissipated foci on the dominant hemisphere.
...
PMID:Surgical treatment of epilepsy. 212 1
We investigated the influence of milacemide, a glycinamide derivative with putative antiepileptic activity, on the K(+)-activation of Na+,K(+)-ATPase in bulk isolated glial cells and synaptosomes of control and epileptogenic cortex of cats with a chronic freeze lesion. In the primary and secondary epileptic foci of non-treated animals, glial Na+,K(+)-ATPase lost its physiological K(+)-activation, while the synaptosomal enzyme was unchanged. These data reproduced previous work done on the kinetic measurement of the enzymic activities. In treated animals (500 mg/kg milacemide given orally for 2 weeks after the freeze lesion), the glial enzyme showed a normal K(+)-activation in the epileptic foci. These results confirm the existence of an abnormal glial Na+,K(+)-ATPase in cold-induced
focal epilepsy
and suggest that the antiepileptic activity of milacemide might be secondary to an activation of glial Na+,K(+)-ATPase, contributing to antagonize ictal transformation and seizure spread.
...
PMID:Milacemide stimulates deficient glial Na+, K(+)-ATPase in freezing-induced epileptogenic cortex of cats. 216 31
As many as 99 patients with
focal epilepsy
were examined for recognition of the emotional-prosodic++ speech characteristics, non-vocal acoustic complexes, acoustic and acoustic vocal memory as well as for noise stability of the acoustic vocal system. The presence, character and intensity of psychopathological abnormalities identified in those patients were estimated at a time. The correlation and factorial analyses made it possible to discover the existence of significant relationships between the two lines of abnormalities. Several types of such relationships have been described. It is assumed that in some cases, disorders of impressive emotional psychoacoustic functions may represent one of the pathogenetic mechanisms of mental disorders associated with focal cortical epilepsy.
...
PMID:[Disorders of recognition of emotional and prosodic characteristics of speech in various mental disorders in patients with focal cortical epilepsy]. 217 Dec 67
We report 3 cases of epilepsy with bilateral occipital calcifications followed up for several years. These cases were compared with 21 published cases and were found to differ from the classical Sturge-Weber syndrome on several points: 1) the disease appeared around the age of 5 years and consisted of
focal epilepsy
without neurological or mental disorders; 2) the epilepsy was easy to control during 2 to 5 years. This was followed by a diffuse encephalopathy with severe, treatment-resistant epilepsy, Gerstmann's syndrome, optic ataxia, cerebellar syndrome and slow activity at EEG. It appears from these 3 cases that: 1) occipital calcifications may be unilateral at the onset of the disease; 2) visual evoked potentials are affected at a late stage, and 3) CT scans are of considerable value in the prognosis of benign epilepsy in childhood.
...
PMID:[Epilepsy and bilateral occipital calcifications: 3 cases]. 219 37
This article reviews the application of magnetoencephalography (MEG) in clinical epileptology and epilepsy research. MEG recordings of interictal as well as ictal epileptiform discharges helped to improve non-invasive localization of epileptic foci in patients with
focal epilepsy
. Several studies showed good agreement of the localizations obtained from MEG compared with those from invasive electrical recordings. Thus, MEG may become a potentially useful technique in the pre-surgical evaluation of epilepsy patients. As evidenced from studying the penicillin focus in animals and spike propagation in humans, MEG also may contribute to further understand the basic mechanisms of epilepsy and thus may be useful in epilepsy research. Directions of future research include recording from a large number of channels covering a wide area of the head, long-term recording to study mechanisms involved in the transition of interictal to ictal state, and recording of slow magnetic field shifts associated with interictal and ictal epileptiform discharges.
...
PMID:Magnetoencephalography in clinical epileptology and epilepsy research. 220 Apr 89
Epilepsy and epileptogenic activity in EEGs were studied in 168 shunt treated hydrocephalic (HC) children, the mean age at first operation 1.62 years (SD 1.87). 80 patients (47.6%) suffered from epileptic seizures during the follow-up period (mean 8.9 years). The epileptic seizures appeared before the initial shunting, and after the first shunt implantation in 43 (25.6%). There was no correlation between epilepsy and the aetiology of HC, number of shunt revisions, or shunt infections. Sixteen patients suffered from seizures during the neonatal period. Generalized spike and wave activity (SWA) was seen in EEG in eight out of these, and only one was seizure-free at the end of the follow-up period. All eight patients with epileptic seizures during the neonatal period without generalized SWA in EEG were seizure-free, however. SWA was seen in the first EEG prior to shunting in 75/168 patients (44.6%). All those patients who did not receive prophylactic medication, developed epileptic seizures, whereas 68.1% of those who received prophylactic anticonvulsive medication remained free of seizures.
Partial epilepsy
after shunting manifested itself in 15 patients, but this did not correlate with the side of the shunt or with the side of the SWA in the EEG. Slit ventricles (SLV) developed in 75 patients during the follow-up period, while the ventricles remained normal or dilated in 66 cases (27 patients had no CT follow-up). Epilepsy manifested itself in 8 out of these 141 patients (2 SLV, 6 non-SLV) during the first postoperative year, and in 29 patients in the SLV group and one in the non-SLV group at some time after the first postoperative year.
...
PMID:Epilepsy in hydrocephalic children. 232 84
The aim of the investigation was to reveal the existence of venous angiomas of the brain by serioangiography in selected neurological diseases and to test the possible connection between the angiographic finding of a VA and neurological symptomatology. The material was formed by 386 serioangiograms in patients with subarachnoid haemorrhage, intracerebral haemorrhage,
focal epilepsy
and unilateral headache. It was revealed that from the total number of mentioned diagnoses there were 18 venous angiomas, i.e. 4.66%. Intracerebral haemorrhage and unilateral headache were most frequent (7.3% and 9%). No difference was found between the right and left hemisphere and between different brain areas. Cerebral angiography remains an important method in the diagnosis of venous angiomas of the brain, provided a satisfactory programme and high quality material are used. Examination by computed tomography without a contrast is of little diagnostic value, the use of contrast in computer tomography can improve the diagnosis.
...
PMID:[Venous angiomas of the brain. Retrospective study of angiograms and clinical material]. 233 94
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>