Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0025362 (mental retardation)
15,878 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Among the partial epilepsies with complex partial seizures (CPS) following febrile convulsions (FC), there is an idiopathic epilepsy with extremely benign outcome, characterized by: 1) no past history suggesting brain insult, no underlying brain lesions, no neurological abnormalities, no mental retardation; 2) a high incidence of a positive family history of FC or benign epilepsy; 3) no past history of prolonged febrile convulsions; 4) EEG spike foci other than anterior temporal ones; 5) CPS easily controlled with full recovery.
...
PMID:Benign epilepsy of children with complex partial seizures following febrile convulsions. 816 75

Pediatric epileptology is very different from adult epileptology. Although some epileptic disorders occur in both children and adults (e.g., localization-related epilepsy with complex partial seizures and primary generalized epilepsy with tonic-clonic seizures), other disorders can be called the catastrophic epilepsies of childhood (e.g., infantile spasms and the Lennox-Gastaut syndrome). They occur, or at least begin, exclusively in childhood and are often associated with mental retardation. Many of these pediatric disorders are notoriously unresponsive to currently available antiepileptic drugs (AEDs). Although there are undoubtedly many reasons for this, one possible explanation is that the methods used to screen potential AEDs use animal models of adult epilepsy. No screening program uses an animal model of seizures that begin during development and lead to functional decline.
...
PMID:Investigational antiepileptic drugs for the treatment of childhood seizure disorders: a review of efficacy and safety. 827 78

We report the results of 34 patients who underwent corpus callosotomy between 1986 and 1989 with 28-65 months of postoperative follow-up (mean 42 months). Thirty-two patients had mental retardation and 26 had significant behavioral problems. Thirteen patients had total section, 8 had subtotal section with preservation of the posterior half of the splenium, and 13 had section of the anterior two thirds of the callosum. Satisfactory seizure control was achieved in 25 patients (73.5%) Atonic seizures, followed by tonic seizures, generalized tonic-clonic seizures (GTCs), and atypical absence seizures were most improved. Myoclonic and complex partial seizures (CPS) did not improve significantly. No deterioration in seizure status was observed postoperatively. Two patients developed previously unobserved simple seizures and CPS postoperatively, but they were not as disabling as the preoperative seizures. Among the patients with behavioral problems, 81% had significant decrease in aggressiveness, hyperactivity, and/or attention deficit. Patients who underwent total section had interhemispheric disconnection symptoms that improved progressively and did not interfere with daily life. Decreased speech output, dysarthria, and gait dyspraxia occurred after total callosal section and persisted in 5 of the 13 patients. Patients who underwent anterior two thirds or subtotal sections did not have such symptoms. Early postoperative complications consisted of aseptic ventriculitis (5), subdural hematoma (1), and wound infection (4) and resolved without sequelae.
...
PMID:Corpus callosotomy in treatment of medically resistant epilepsy: preliminary results in a pediatric population. 840 46

A family history of epileptic seizures including febrile convulsions was found in 15 of 103 patients (15%) with localization related epilepsy with partial seizures with and without secondary generalization, who were operated on because of drug resistance. This rate was significantly higher than that of the cumulative incidence in the general population (4%). The localization of the brain damage did not play a role (temporal lobe resection left: 15%, right: 17%, extra-temporal lesion excision: 20%, hemispherectomy: 11%). Various family members were involved. Some patients had more than one relative with seizures. Thus, 21 relatives suffered from seizures. Eleven of them had generalized tonic-clonic seizures (one grand mal on awakening), 7 had febrile convulsions (4 complicated), and in 1 patient the grand mal seizures on awakening were preceded by absences; 1 had generalized tonic-clonic and complex partial seizures; 1 after complicated febrile seizures likewise had complex partial seizures; another mentally retarded patient suffered from generalized tonic-clonic, axial tonic and myoclonic-astatic seizures. The seizure type of 3 remote relatives was not known. The first seizure occurred in 16 family members during childhood, in 3 in adolescence and in only 1 in adulthood (1 unknown). Eight showed mental retardation of slight degree in most. It is interesting that only one-third of the patients with a family history with seizures were seizure-free after the operation; 5 still had seizures, mostly reduced in frequency, 3 had seizures and isolated auras and 2 had only isolated auras. On comparing the findings in patients with and without a family history with seizures, those with family members with epileptic seizures showed a lower rate of an intellectual deficit (7 vs 47%) and brain tumours (13 vs 44%). Our earlier findings with a different group of patients are thus confirmed: that genetics play a role in symptomatic epilepsies.
...
PMID:The genetics of localization-related symptomatic epilepsy: risk of a family history with seizures in patients who have undergone surgery. 926 63

Congenital bilateral perisylvian syndrome (CBPS) is a recently described, neuronal migration disorder, characterized by pseudobulbar palsy, epilepsy and mental retardation and bilateral perisylvian dysplasia. A 15-year-old boy was diagnosed with CBPS according to the typical clinical, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) features. The patient was suffering from atypical absence seizures, repeating daily in spite of antiepileptic drug therapy, since age 7 years. He had also experienced rare generalized tonic-clonic seizures and complex partial seizures. Neurological examination showed severe restriction of tongue movements, severe dysarthria, dysphagia, facial diplegia, mild pyramidal signs and moderate mental retardation. A computed tomographic (CT) scan demonstrated bilateral perisylvian enlargement. The diagnosis was corrected with MRI after six years. Frequent irregular generalized spike and wave abnormalities and focal sharp and slow waves over the posterior regions of both hemispheres were shown by electroencephalograms (EEG). The patient was treated with Na-Valproate, carbamazepine and lamotrigine but did now show any significant change in seizure frequency in the eight-year follow-up period. Intractable seizures, mental retardation and particularly congenital pseudobulbar palsy suggest this congenital entity. Those patients who exhibit these typically clinical features, must have MRI.
...
PMID:A clinically recognizable neuronal migration disorder: congenital bilateral perisylvian syndrome. Case report with long-term clinical and EEG follow-up. 953 Sep 47

Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency is an X linked disorder and the most common inherited cause of hyperammonaemia. Fluctuating concentrations of ammonia, glutamine, and other excitotoxic amino acids result in a chronic or episodically recurring encephalopathy. A heterozygous female patient first presented with protein intolerance, attacks of vomiting, and signs of mental retardation in early childhood. At the age of 16 complex partial seizures occurred which were treated with sodium valproate. Seven days after initiation of valproate therapy, she developed severe hyperammonaemic encephalopathy with deep somnolence. The maximum concentration of ammonia was 480 micromol/l. After withdrawal of valproate, three cycles of plasma dialysis, and initiation of a specific therapy for the inborn metabolic disease, ammonia concentrations fell to normal values. The patient remitted, returning to her premorbid state. Valproate can cause high concentrations of ammonia in serum in patients with normal urea cycle enzymes and may worsen a pre-existing hyperammonaemia caused by an enzymatic defect of the urea cycle. Sufficient diagnostic tests for the detection of metabolic disorders must be performed before prescribing valproate for patients with a history of encephalopathy.
...
PMID:Hyperammonaemic encephalopathy after initiation of valproate therapy in unrecognised ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency. 959 92

We reported a 24-year-old woman with moderate mental retardation and partial epilepsy. She developed complex partial seizures at 3 years of age and generalized tonic convulsions at 9 years. Chromosome analysis revealed that she had mosaicism (87%) of 46, XX, and r(20) (p13,q13.3). Her electroencephalogram showed bilateral 2-3 Hz sharp and wave complex over the bilateral frontopolar, and centro-parieto-occipital areas. Computed tomographic and magnetic resonance image examinations were normal. Twenty-five cases of ring 20 chromosome karyotypes (including this case) have been reported in the literature; 19 showed epilepsy, and 18 showed moderate mental retardation. Many of the patients showed growth retardation and minor malformations. The ring 20 syndrome is associated with a high incidence of epilepsy, particularly partial epilepsy. Our findings indicate that the main features of the ring 20 syndrome are partial epilepsy and mental retardation.
...
PMID:A study of ring 20 chromosome karyotype with epilepsy. 968 35

A Japanese male with mosaicism of ring chromosome 14 and chromosome 14 monosomy is described. He demonstrated the characteristic morphologic features of ring chromosome 14, in addition to mental retardation and epileptic seizures. Clusters of complex partial seizures, one of which originated in the left frontocentral region on electroencephalographic monitoring, were evident. His seizures responded to phenobarbital, and his mental and motor development was only mildly retarded. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed a hypoplastic corpus callosum, previously unknown in association with this syndrome.
...
PMID:Ring chromosome 14 complicated with complex partial seizures and hypoplastic corpus callosum. 1002 66

Whether seizures are the direct cause of cognitive deterioration in epileptic children is undetermined. This retrospective study aimed to delineate a subgroup of pediatric patients with cognitive deterioration and refractory seizures in the absence of recognized causes for mental retardation. Of the 80 children identified as having mental retardation and refractory seizure disorder, seven (8.7%) had normal cognitive development until at least 1 year of age. Their metabolic status was normal. Five of them suffered repeated frequent partial seizures with onset in the first year of life and two had repeated episodes of status epilepticus. All seven had similar characteristics of early onset partial seizures, six of them had partial seizures secondarily generalized and one had complex partial seizures. The time of peak cognitive deterioration correlated with increases in seizure frequency during that period. Evaluation revealed a well-defined epileptic focus in the absence of neuroimaging abnormality except for hippocampal atrophy in the two children with complex partial seizures and a small vascular malformation in one child. Uncontrolled partial seizures in the first months of life may result in cognitive deterioration.
...
PMID:Mental retardation subsequent to refractory partial seizures in infancy. 1076 31

We analyzed the electroclinical findings in two patients with bilateral posterior agyria-pachygyria. Both patients presented with mental retardation, mild motor deficit and epilepsy. The electroclinical findings were characterized by frequent tonic or atonic generalized seizures with occasionally simple or complex partial seizures. Interictal electroencephalography (EEG) showed occipital spikes and diffuse polyspike-wave paroxysms predominantly in the posterior region. Ictal EEG showed diffuse 10-11 Hz activity. Cerebral magnetic resonance imagings (MRIs) showed thickened cortex in the parieto-occipital lobes, bilaterally and symmetrically. The volume of underlying white matter appeared reduced, and the overlying subarachnoid spaces were enlarged. The occipital horns were dilated. These findings were compatible with agyria-pachygyria of the posterior portions of the brain. In conclusion, in patients with mental retardation, mild motor deficit and epilepsy characterized by tonic or atonic generalized seizures, interictal EEG with diffuse polyspike-wave paroxysms predominantly in posterior region, posterior focal epileptilorm abnormalities and ictal diffuse 10-11 Hz activity, bilateral parieto-occipital agyria-pachygyria should be considered as a possible etiology. Magnetic resonance image is the best neuroradiological study to identify this disorder of cortical development.
...
PMID:Bilateral posterior agyria-pachygyria and epilepsy. 1258 9


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 Next >>