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)

Free amino compounds were measured in 16 rapidly frozen epileptogenic foci excised from temporal or frontal cortex of nine patients with focal epilepsy, and in single cortical biopsy specimens obtained from 16 nonepileptic patients. Unlike the findings of a previous study, glutamic and aspartic acids were not diminished in the foci, nor was there a decrease in gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) or taurine levels. Glycine content was markedly elevated in two of 16 epileptogenic foci. These results do not suggest that deficiencies of GABA or of taurine, amino acids that may act physiologically as inhibitory neurotransmitters or modulators of inhibition, are causes of focal epilepsy, nor do they provide a logical basis for clinical trials of taurine in treatment of human epilepsy.
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PMID:Amino acids in human epileptogenic foci. 81 Jan 20

We compared amino acid contents of 54 epileptogenic foci removed neurosurgically from temporal or frontal cortex of 35 patients with focal epilepsy with those of biopsies from the same cortical regions of 14 nonepileptic patients. Neither taurine nor GABA content was reduced in epileptogenic foci. Glycine content was elevated markedly in some foci, whereas aspartic acid content was normal. Mean glutamic acid content was significantly higher in epileptogenic foci than in control cortex, and six foci contained amounts of glutamate more than 2 SD above the control mean. Our findings do not support hypotheses that deficiencies of taurine or GABA are involved in the pathogenesis of focal epilepsy but do suggest a possible etiologic role for the excitatory neurotransmitter, glutamic acid.
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PMID:Amino acid abnormalities in epileptogenic foci. 678 61

A wide range of clinical presentations including neuromuscular disorders and autoimmune encephalopathies is being recognized to be associated with various autoantibodies. Glycine receptor (GlyR) antibodies have so far been found mainly in adult patients with phenotypes comprising progressive encephalomyelitis with rigidity and myoclonus or stiff-person syndrome. We report a four-year-old boy who presented with a two-year-history of drug-resistant focal epilepsy with unusual seizure semiology, temper tantrums, headache, clumsiness, and intermittently impaired speech. While MRI and CSF were normal, screening for autoimmune antibodies revealed GlyR antibodies in serum. Immunomodulatory treatment with steroids resulted in rapid and complete resolution of symptoms. Our observation widens the spectrum of clinical presentations associated with GlyR antibodies and emphasizes the potential relevance of neuronal autoantibodies in epilepsies of unknown cause in children as well as in adults.
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PMID:Glycine receptor antibodies in a boy with focal epilepsy and episodic behavioral disorder. 2488 May 41