Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0017638 (glioma)
30,880 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Of 29 consecutive children treated for malignant primary tumors of the central nervous system (CNS) at this institution, postoperative examination showed radiographic or cytologic evidence of neuraxis dissemination in 10 (34%). Given the historically poor results in disseminated CNS tumors treated with surgery and radiation therapy alone, these ten patients were treated prospectively with an investigational Phase II protocol consisting of preirradiation cisplatin (90 mg/m2 on day 1) and etoposide (150 mg/m2 on days 3 and 4). The diagnoses included medulloblastoma (n = 4), malignant glioma (n = 3), cerebral primitive neuroectodermal tumor (n = 1), pineoblastoma (n = 1), and mixed glioma of the brainstem (n = 1). Postoperative neuraxis scanning with computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, or spinal myelography showed measurable intracranial or spinal metastases in all children. The cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) cytologic examination was positive for tumor cells in five. The best responses, based on serial imaging of neuraxis metastases, included two complete responses, four partial responses, and three stable disease states. One patient had progressive disease at the primary site despite stable disease in the spine; progressive neuraxis disease was documented in only one patient during chemotherapy. Clearance of tumor cells from the CSF was documented in three patients. The adverse effects of chemotherapy, consisting of transient myelosuppression and mild ototoxicity, were minimal. Reversible neurologic deterioration occurred in two patients; one patient became acutely quadriplegic after a prolonged convulsive seizure without radiographic evidence of tumor progression.
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PMID:Neuraxis dissemination in pediatric brain tumors. Response to preirradiation chemotherapy. 173 73

Since the original observations of cerebral disconnection in experimental conditions with animal models, the surgical division of the cerebral commissures for control of seizure activity has led to the description of a human hemispheric disconnection syndrome. More recently, MR has revealed a spectrum of conditions of the forebrain responsible for the natural development and acquired occurrence of this unique commissural syndrome. Acutely, nonspecific expressions of disconnection may be observed; however, there are no explicit behavioral manifestations of this syndrome in the chronic state. The signs of stabilized hemispheric disconnection are only elicitable via sophisticated, neuropsychological testing performed by experienced technicians. Included in the present series of callosal pathology were individuals with agenesis, surgical section, infarction, trauma, glioma, and Marchiafava-Bignami disease. On specialized examination, the surgical "split-brain" patients illustrated the classic syndrome of a halt of interhemispheric transfer of information, a block of nondominant hemisphere access to language functions and an inhibition of dominant hemisphere access to superior visuospatial capacity. The nonsurgical subjects with developmental callosal agenesis and acquired pathologic processes involving the callosum revealed a varied, nonspecific reduction in cognitive function most probably related to associated extracallosal hemispheric pathology. No external abnormalities in behavior which could be attributed specifically to the callosal findings were identified chronically, although some progressive diseases suggested the presence of a subacute symptomatic phase of the disconnection syndrome. Any condition which causes the division, destructive insult, or primary ontogenic nondecussation of commissural axons will produce an interference in interhemispheric, interneuronal communication. This is manifested by individual degrees of covert interhemispheric data transfer arrest and of reduced bidirectional dominant-nondominant hemispheric access and telencephalic integrative capacity, consistent with a cerebral commissuropathy. This study reveals the MR equivalents of the hemispheric disconnection syndrome which occur in many nonspecific pathologic conditions of the cerebrum, but which result in few if any overt behavioral aberrations in the stabilized state.
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PMID:The MR equivalents of cerebral hemispheric disconnection: a telencephalic commissuropathy. 175 51

One hundred and seventy children of chronic seizures with strong clinical suspicion of an underlying intracranial lesion as its cause were studied by Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI). Maximum number of patients were between 6-12 years, males outnumbering females. Structural abnormalities were seen in 158 of the 170 patients. The study revealed tuberculoma as the commonest lesion in this series (n = 64) followed by cysticercosis (n = 27). Three patients were seen to have glioma. An interesting finding was disappearing lesion in 6 children. MRI proved to be an excellent modality in demonstrating and characterising the intracranial lesion.
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PMID:Magnetic resonance imaging in childhood epilepsy. 180 Mar 50

The authors present their review of 178 patients who underwent en bloc temporal lobectomies as surgical treatment for intractable epilepsy. Hippocampal cell density was quantitatively analyzed and the histology of the anterior temporal lobe was reviewed. Fifty-four patients (30.3%) had evidence of extrahippocampal lesions in addition to neuronal cell loss within the hippocampus (the dual pathology group). The pattern of cell loss was analyzed in the remaining 124 cases (69.7%) with no extrahippocampal pathology, and compared with that of the dual pathology group and a control group of four nonepileptic patients. Hippocampal cell loss was found in almost all epileptic patients compared to the control group. Severe cell loss greater than 30% of control values was found in 88.7% of patients without extrahippocampal lesions, but in only 51.8% of patients with dual pathology. The difference between these two groups was statistically significant (p less than 0.001). In the dual pathology group, lesions of different pathology had a significant relationship with the degree of hippocampal cell loss: all 12 patients with glioma had mild cell loss, whereas all 13 patients with heterotopia were associated with severe cell loss. Severity of hippocampal cell loss was also analyzed in relation to seizure history: a prior severe head injury was associated with severe cell loss. Other factors such as seizure duration, secondary generalization, or family history of seizures were not associated with hippocampal damage. Dual pathology may produce a combination of neocortical and temporolimbic epilepsies that warrants a precise definition of the true epileptogenic area prior to surgical treatment.
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PMID:Surgical treatment of limbic epilepsy associated with extrahippocampal lesions: the problem of dual pathology. 186 34

A case of adult pilocytic astrocytoma in the right temporal lobe is reported here. The patient was a twenty-four year old man, who came to the neurological division of our hospital on October 6, 1987 because of repeated consciousness-loss attacks accompanied with uncinate fit. He had no neurological deficits. However, an EEG revealed spike-and-wave complexes in the right temporal region, and a CT scan showed a small cystic lesion in the right temporal lobe. A diagnosis of psychomotor seizure was made, and the administration of anticonvulsants was started. The incidence of attack then decreased, but after approximately two years of drug therapy the attacks increased again. A CT scan was again performed, and revealed that the lesion in the right temporal lobe was enlarging. Also a noticeable enhanced lesion, identified as a mural nodule was found in the post-contrast enhancement study. A brain tumor was then suspected, and he was admitted to the neurosurgical division on October 11, 1989. He had no neurological deficits on admission. An MRI showed a low intensity lesion in the T1 weighted image, and a high intensity lesion in the T2 weighted image. A cystic lesion with a marked enhanced mural nodule was also found in the base of the right temporal lobe, according to the Gd enhancement study. Perifocal edema was not recognized. Cerebral angiography showed no positive findings. Positron emission tomography (PET), using H2(15)O, revealed low perfusion at or around the lesion, and PET using [11C]-methionine revealed an accumulation of methionine at the lesion. A diagnosis of low-grade glioma was made, and a right temporal craniotomy, for the purpose of totally removing the tumor was performed on October 26, 1989.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[A case of adult pilocytic astrocytoma in the right temporal lobe]. 189 Oct 62

We studied the etiology of seizures in 46 patients who developed seizures after age 65 years. The most frequent cause was cerebrovascular disease, accounting for 41.3% of all cases. Clinical diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease was made in 5 patients (10.8%). Other etiologies were; metabolic encephalopathies in 6.5%, craniocerebral trauma in 4.3% and glioma in 2.1%. The etiology of seizures remained unknown in 34.7%. They had generalized tonic-clonic seizures in 48%. They were partial or partial secondarily generalized in 44.1%. The role of Alzheimer's disease in late onset seizures has not been important enough in previous studies. We believe that a well-designed prospective study will let us know the real frequency of the causes of seizures in the elderly.
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PMID:[Etiology of epileptic crises in the geriatric patient. Results of a retrospective study]. 195 24

Eleven patients with intractable complex partial seizures underwent temporal lobectomy during their first decade. The mean age at onset of epilepsy was two years and at surgery was 5.5 years. On the basis of data from clinical evaluation, CT, MRI in six patients, and pathological examination of excised tissue, the aetiology of the epilepsy was thought to be mesial temporal sclerosis in four children, glioma in five, dysplasia in one and chronic progressive encephalitis in another. At follow-up eight children were seizure-free, two had reduced seizure frequency and only the child with chronic progressive encephalitis had not benefitted from surgery.
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PMID:Temporal lobectomy for the treatment of intractable complex partial seizures of temporal lobe origin in early childhood. 199 6

The case notes of 29 children ranging in age between 6 months and 17 years were reviewed for the period 1978-88. This study was done to determine if there were any differences when compared with other series in the developed countries. In addition, the distribution, tumour type, clinical presentations, and outcome were reviewed. Of the 29 tumours, 15 tumours were confined to the posterior fossa (52 per cent), and tumours were located supratentorially (48 per cent). Of the 15 tumours in the posterior fossa, five were medulloblastomas, four brain stem astrocytomas, and six cerebellar astrocytomas. The supra-tentorial tumours included, five astrocytomas, two pituitary tumours, two cranio-pharyngiomas, one hypothalamic glioma, and four intraventricular tumours. Clinical presentation was confined to symptoms and signs related to raised intracranial pressure, ataxia, seizures, and cranial nerve involvement. All the tumours were resected surgically except for the brain stem tumours, which were treated in most cases with radiation therapy. The overall mortality was 48 per cent (14 patients died). We were unable to comment on long-term survival except for a 100 per cent survival in patients with pituitary and cerebral tumours, and 67 per cent in patients with cerebellar astrocytomas.
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PMID:Primary pediatric brain tumours in Barbados: 10-year analysis (1978-1988). 202 66

Human microvessels were isolated and cultured from non-neoplastic cerebral tissue specimens resected for the treatment of seizure disorders and from malignant glial tumors. After 1-2 weeks, cobblestone patterned plaques of cells were isolated and cultured from these microvessels. Cell lines positive for Factor VIII antigen and negative for glial fibrillary acidic protein were designated as endothelium. Endothelium from both tissue sources produced gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase in response to glial cell conditioned media. Tumor derived microvessel endothelium had decreased longevity in culture when compared to normal microvessel endothelium. Tumor derived endothelium also formed less extensive intercellular junctional complexes in vitro. The isolation and characterization of human cerebral microvessel endothelium derived from non-neoplastic tissue and glial tumors may lead to a further understanding of the role of endothelium in tumor growth and vascular permeability alterations.
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PMID:Human cerebral endothelium: isolation and characterization of cells derived from microvessels of non-neoplastic and malignant glial tissue. 211 73

Twenty consecutive patients with chronic partial seizures with onset before twenty years of age were investigated by means of 0.5 T MRI (20) and HM-PAO (19) in order to identify focal alterations amenable to surgical therapy. MRI evidentiated parenchymal lesions in 7 patients. Findings consistent with unilateral medial temporal sclerosis and cortico-subcortical parietal scars were found in two patients each. Small solid nodular lesions in the temporal lobe were observed in two patients. These and one additional patient with nodular partially cystic lesions in temporal lobe were administered a paramagnetic contrast agent (Gadolinium DPA) intravenously. In one case a contrast enhancement was observed. Histologic examination post surgery revealed a low grade glioma in one patient. HM-PAO SPECT examination showed area of abnormal captation in 9 of 19 patients. Aspects of EEG correlation with the MRI and SPECT findings are discussed. Our data supported the usefulness of magnetic resonance and SPECT imaging in the completion of pre-surgical assessment in this kind of patients.
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PMID:[MRI and HM-PAO SPECT in 20 patients with drug-resistant partial epilepsy]. 212 12


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