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Query: UMLS:C0017638 (
glioma
)
30,880
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We reviewed retrospectively a series of 100 inpatients with onset of epileptic seizure after the age of 60. All of them were investigated by EEG and 96 by CT scan. The most frequent cause of seizure was previous stroke, with 25 cerebral infarcts and 5 hemorrhages. Neoplastic lesions were present in 18 cases, with
glioma
(high grade), meningioma and metastases in the same proportion. Other etiologies included toxico-metabolic (18 cases), post-traumatic (9 cases), cerebral atrophy (4 cases) and miscellaneous (14 cases). The causes of seizure remained unknown in 7 patients, of whom 6 had focal signs in either clinical examination or EEG.
Focal seizures
(with or without secondary generalization) accounted for 65% of all cases and generalized seizures for 35%. The EEG was normal in 12 patients and abnormal in 88, with diffuse slowing in 55 patients and focal signs in 70 (some patients had both diffuse slowing and focal signs). Fourteen patients presented status epilepticus. Ten died during hospitalization. We conclude that epileptic seizure with onset after age 60 is nearly always symptomatic, and neuroradiologic investigations are necessary in the search for cerebral lesions. In our study, the prevalence of "idiopathic epilepsy" is lower than previously described.
...
PMID:[Initial epileptic crisis after the age of 60: etiology, clinical aspects and EEG]. 234 61
Regional cerebral blood flow (r CBF) was measured by the I.V. 133 Xenon method and use of 27 detectors in 91 patients with complex partial epilepsy in interictal periods (at least 48 h over a complex
partial seizure
). Some were also examined less than 48 h before or after seizures. All were studied with ictal and interictal electroencephalography (EEG), polysomnography, computed tomography (CT), some had nuclear magnetic resonance scans (MR). The blood flow values were compared with a group of a 20 normal subjects matching for age. A significant decrease of r CBF ranged from 15% to 25% was found in the temporal region in three groups of epileptic patients: with repeated normal CT scans and lateralized EEG abnormalities (N = 46); with cortical atrophy in CT scan (N = 12); with neurosurgical focal lesions on CT and or MR scans
glioma
, arteriovenous malformation) (N = 10). r CBF was normal or decreased by less than 15% in the other regions of the brain. Patients with repeated normal CT scans and bilateral EEG abnormalities either asynchronous or alternatively observed in the right side or left side on waking EEG or during NREM sleep and REM sleep, did not show reduction in r CBF. In a previous study, r CBF distribution was also found normal during interictal phase in patients with primary generalized epilepsy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Regional cerebral blood flow in partial complex epilepsy with and without the presence of lesions]. 380 89
We report a rare case of epileptogenic
glioma
composed of glial progenitor cells that differentiated into an astrocytic and oligodendrocytic tumor. This 4-year-old girl presented with a 1-year history of complex
partial seizure
. MR scan showed a mass in the left temporal lobe with a cyst and a contrast-enhanced component. Subtotal resection of the tumor was achieved. Histological examination revealed that the tumor exhibited low cellularity composed of astrocytic and oligodendrocytic components, as well as low mitotic activity (MIB-1 = 1%). Immunohistochemical examination revealed GFAP positivity within the astrocytic cells, olig2 positivity within the oligodendrocytic cells, and S100 positivity in both cell types. MAP2 and CD34 were negative, and neurofilament was only positive in preexisting neurons. The pathological diagnosis was epileptogenic
glioma
(grade I) composed of glial progenitor cells. The postoperative course has been uneventful with good seizure control for 3 years.
...
PMID:Epileptogenic glioma in a 4-year-old child: a case report. 2104 16
We report a rare case of a high-grade
glioma
masquerading as a small subcortical hemorrhage. A 71-year-old woman came to a local hospital with sudden right upper extremity numbness. Computed tomography revealed a small subcortical hemorrhage with faint perifocal edema in the left postcentral gyrus. Conservative treatment was initiated, and she was discharged from the hospital with no neurological deficits. Six months later after discharge, she suffered an acute
partial seizure
of the right upper extremity. Magnetic resonance imaging with gadolinium demonstrated a ring-enhancing mass surrounded by severe perifocal edema in the hemorrhagic scar. We performed complete resection of the tumor, and the histological diagnosis was anaplastic oligodendroglioma. The diagnosis of a high-grade
glioma
was delayed due to intratumoral hemorrhages mimicking a small subcortical hemorrhage; consequently, we suspected the hemorrhage was induced by cerebral amyloid angiopathy. It may be important to repeat radiological follow up, if necessary, and to maintain clinical observance of possible intracranial neoplasm, even when the hemorrhage is small, particularly when the cause of bleeding is unknown.
...
PMID:High-grade Glioma Masquerading as a Small Cerebral Hemorrhage: A Case Report. 3184 70