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Query: UMLS:C0015672 (
fatigue
)
51,768
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Data from 50 patients with
juvenile myoclonic epilepsy
(
JME
) were analyzed retrospectively to assess the response to drug therapy--long-term seizure control, relapse rates, and confounding factors in seizure recurrence. Valproate is the only available antiepileptic drug that has been shown to be effective in controlling the generalized seizure components of
JME
--myoclonic, tonic--clonic, and absence seizures--without significant side effects. Data were collected using the EpiMonitor software and represented case follow-up from 2 months to 9 years. Forty-three patients (86%) were seizure free for at least 1 year; 25 patients (50%) relapsed at some point during follow-up. Relapses were precipitated most frequently by
fatigue
, noncompliance, stress, sleep deprivation, and alcohol consumption. With accurate diagnosis and appropriate therapy, seizures in
JME
can be adequately controlled, although
JME
is a chronic disorder that may require lifelong therapy. To minimize relapse, patient management must also focus on patient lifestyle to eliminate or control lifestyle-associated precipitants of seizure relapse.
...
PMID:Juvenile myoclonic epilepsy: long-term response to therapy. 250 7
Fifteen patients who experienced epileptic seizures while playing video games are described together with a review of 20 cases in the English literature. Nine of the 15 cases and all but two of the reported cases experienced their first seizure while playing video games. Two thirds of patients had idiopathic generalised epilepsy and mainly reported generalised tonic clonic seizures, but some had typical absence seizures and myoclonic jerks while playing video games. In this series, 30% with idiopathic generalised epilepsy had
juvenile myoclonic epilepsy
. Overall, 70% of patients with idiopathic generalised epilepsy were photosensitive to intermittent photic stimulation and the mechanism of seizure provocation was probably similar to that of television induced seizures, although sensitivity to specific patterns was sometimes important. Two children had self induced video game seizures. Non-photic factors such as excitement,
fatigue
, sleep deprivation, cognitive processing, and diurnal variation in susceptibility seemed to be important seizure precipitants, particularly in non-photo-sensitive patients. Twenty nine per cent of patients had partial (mainly occipital) video game associated seizures. Occipital spikes were common in the EEG of these patients. Photosensitivity to intermittent photic stimulation may have been important in two patients but in the others, who all played arcade video games, other mechanisms need to be considered. Video game associated seizures are a feature of several epileptic syndromes and differ in precipitants and appropriate management.
...
PMID:Video game induced seizures. 805 15
We made a long term prospective study of 66 patients with
juvenile myoclonic epilepsy
(
JME
). Prevalence was 10.2% among 672 patients with epilepsies. Sex distribution was equal. Sixty-three were not diagnosed on referral;
JME
was not initially recognized in the epilepsy clinic in 22. Clinical typical absence seizures were reported in 33.3%, myoclonic jerks in 97% and generalized tonic-clonic seizures (GTC) in 78.8% of the patients. Mean age (+/- SD) at onset was 10.5 +/- 3.4 years (range 5-16 years) for absence seizures, 15 +/- 3.5 years (range 8-26 years) for myoclonic jerks, and 16 +/- 3.5 years (9-28) years (range 1-9 years) and GTC by 4.4 +/- 2.7 years (range 1-8 years) in 14 (21.2%) patients who manifested all three types of seizure. Absence were never antedated by myoclonic jerks or GTC. Myoclonic jerks occurred on awakening in 87.5% of the patients. GTC occurred mainly on awakening, but other patients had nocturnal or diurnal GTC with no circadian distribution. Neurologic examination was normal for all patients except for tremor of the hands similar to essential tremor, noted in 35% of patients. Computed tomography (CT) brain scans were normal: 93% of patients had precipitating factors: sleep deprivation (89.5%),
fatigue
(73.7%), photosensitivity (36.8%; television and video games 8.8%), menstruation (24.1% of women), mental concentration (22.8%), and stress (12.3%). Incidence of
JME
among siblings (13 of 41 examined families) implies an autosomal recessive mode of inheritance for this Arab population. EEGs were frequently normal in treated patients. At least one abnormal EEG was recorded in 56 (84.9%) patients. Abnormalities consisted mainly of generalized discharges of spike/double spike and/or polyspike and slow wave. Frequent multiple spikes and discharge fragmentations varied from 0.5- to 20-s duration (mean 6.8 s). Twenty (30.3%) had focal abnormalities, and 18 (27.3%) had photoconvulsive discharges. Eighty-eight percent of patients remained seizure-free for > or = 3 years of follow-up. Effective treatment was achieved with valproate (VPA); control of myoclonic jerks was improved with clonazepam (CZP). CZP monotherapy did not consistently prevent GTC. Adding small doses of CZP with simultaneous reduction of VPA was the most effective and better tolerated form of medication, particularly in patients demonstrating an adverse reaction or requiring a large VPA dosage. VPA dosage was successfully reduced in 15 patients who were seizure-free for > 2 years and had infrequent seizures before treatment, but 9 of 11 patients relapsed after VPA discontinuation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Juvenile myoclonic epilepsy: a 5-year prospective study. 815 46
Juvenile myoclonic epilepsy
(
JME
) is characterized by myoclonic jerks on awakening, generalized tonic--clonic seizures (GTCS) and is associated with absence seizures in more than one third of cases. Fifteen patients with
juvenile myoclonic epilepsy
were studied with regard to their clinical profile, EEG data and sleep EEG findings. There was a delay in the diagnosis of
JME
(mean of 3.5 years) due to various reasons. Sleep deprivation was the most common precipitating factor for triggering seizures, followed by
fatigue
. Routine EEGs were abnormal in 73.33% of cases only and had misleading findings in 6.66%. Sleep EEGs were abnormal in 100% of cases with generalized spikes, polyspikes and slow wave discharges. Discharge rates on sleep EEGs typically increased significantly during the transition phase (i.e. the asleep to awakening stage) and we consider this to be a specific finding in appropriate clinical setting. Sleep EEGs are a more sensitive and specific tool for the diagnosis of
JME
while routine awake EEGs may miss or mislead.
...
PMID:Juvenile myoclonic epilepsy: a clinical and sleep EEG study. 1148 50
We have observed epileptic seizures of
juvenile myoclonic epilepsy
(
JME
) to be surprisingly sensitive to higher mental activity. The purpose of the present study was to examine changes over time in seizure susceptibility in two patients with
JME
who we followed-up for over 20 years. During the period, they were repeatedly subjected to provocative cognitive tasking, that is, to 'neuropsychological EEG activation'. Tasks included reading, speaking, writing, written arithmetic, mental calculation, and spatial construction. During the first 15 years after the onset of symptoms, higher mental activities, mainly associated with use of the hands, i.e. writing, written calculation, and spatial construction, as well as physiological factors, such as sleep deprivation, awakening, and
fatigue
, precipitated the seizures. Generalized tonic-clonic and absence seizures but not myoclonic seizures disappeared almost completely after antiepileptic treatment. After age 30, the provocative effect of higher mental activities persisted, and the myoclonic seizures decreased under same drug regimen. These observations suggest that the pathophysiology of
JME
improves with time but persists for a long time, and that it is closely related to a neural network involved in higher mental activities mainly associated with use of the hands rather than in physiological factors emphasized in prior reports.
...
PMID:The long-term course of seizure susceptibility in two patients with juvenile myoclonic epilepsy. 1194
Levetiracetam is highly effective as add-on treatment in refractory partial-onset seizures but there are only limited data supporting its benefit in generalised epilepsies. We have reviewed the clinical records of 25 consecutive adult patients with generalised epilepsies (84% females; mean age 34 (range 16-75) years) prescribed levetiracetam for at least six months. The epilepsy was considered idiopathic in 22 patients (88%)--including 13 with
juvenile myoclonic epilepsy
--and symptomatic in three. Most patients (68%) reported some improvement in seizure frequency on levetiracetam including 16% who became seizure free. Levetiracetam was generally well tolerated although 11/25 (44%) of patients reported some
tiredness
, weight change or rash. Levetiracetam was stopped in five patients, four because of side effects and one though lack of efficacy. In four cases, pre-existing antiepileptic medication was withdrawn, leaving levetiracetam as monotherapy. We conclude that levetiracetam is a useful add-on treatment for patients with refractory generalised epilepsies.
...
PMID:Levetiracetam as add-on therapy in generalised epilepsies. 1532 24
In
juvenile myoclonic epilepsy
(
JME
), occurrence of seizures and epileptiform EEG discharges is influenced by internal and external factors. The most important internal factor is the chronodependency: the occurrence of myoclonic jerks in the early morning is one of the hallmarks of
JME
. Approximately two-thirds of the patients with
JME
report that seizures are provoked by a variety of general factors like stress,
fatigue
, fever, and sleep and more specific precipitants like flashing sunlight, music, reading, thinking, and excess alcohol. The prevalence rate of photosensitivity (photoparoxysmal EEG response) in patients with
JME
ranges from 8 to 90%; it is seen more often in females and adolescents and depends on drug use. Since both
JME
and photosensitivity are connected with generalized types of epilepsy and myoclonus, the two traits are comorbid for that reason. Epileptiform EEG discharges can be provoked by other activation methods: sleep, hyperventilation, and specific cognitive tasks. Attention seems to have a non-specific, inhibitory effect of the epileptiform discharges. Hyperventilation can induce absence seizures in patients with
JME
, while cognitive tasks are efficient in precipitating myoclonic seizures. This article is part of a supplemental special issue entitled
Juvenile Myoclonic Epilepsy
: What is it Really?
...
PMID:Chronodependency and provocative factors in juvenile myoclonic epilepsy. 2375 76
The study of
juvenile myoclonic epilepsy
is important in that: it is common and heterogeneous; the etiology is unknown; and patients report broad cognitive problems. We utilized a broad battery of neuropsychometric tests to assess the following: intellectual function, memory, language and naming, executive function, the impact of epilepsy, and antiepilepsy drug side effects. Sixty people with drug-refractory
JME
were interviewed, and performance was profoundly impaired across the range of tests. Impairments included the following: full-scale IQ (89, p<0.001); processing speed (86, p<0.001); visual memory (immediate and delayed) more affected than verbal memory; verbal fluency and inhibition (p<0.001); and self-reported drug side effects (p<0.001). Eighty-three percent of patients exhibited frank executive dysfunction, which was moderate to severe in 66%. Regression modeling confirmed that an early age at onset and the need for polytherapy were associated with poorer cognitive outcomes. This study confirms previous reports of executive dysfunction in a larger cohort and with greater statistical rigor. We also identified a high prevalence of neurotoxicity symptoms such as
fatigue
and poorer functioning across intellectual and memory tests than had previously been reported.
...
PMID:A comprehensive neuropsychological description of cognition in drug-refractory juvenile myoclonic epilepsy. 2493 58