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

For the treatment of intractable generalized epilepsies, two-staged total callosotomy was performed in five patients. In all patients, preceded anterior callosotomy failed to obtain satisfactory seizure control. All patients showed mental retardation with various degrees. Mean age at the first operation was 10.2 years and 4 patients were operated in their childhood. All patients showed various types of seizures; drop attack (DA) in 3 patients, tonic seizure (TS) in 2, myoclonus (MY) in 2, complex partial seizure (CPS) in 2, atypical absence (AA) in 1, and head drop (HD) in 2. After anterior callosotomy, complete cessation of CPS and 50-80% reduction of DA was obtained in one, respectively. However, only less than 50% reduction of seizures was obtained in other types of seizures. Two years after anterior callosotomy, posterior portion of the corpus callosum was divided. After staged total callosotomy, complete cessation of DA was obtained in all patients and 80-100% reduction of AA was obtained in one patient. One adult patient showed the disconnection syndrome which did not affect activities of his daily life. Our study revealed the efficacy of posterior callosotomy in DA patients with unsatisfactory results after anterior callosotomy. This strategy should be considered especially in childhood cases, since obvious complication was not observed in such cases.
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PMID:[Staged total callosotomy for medically intractable seizures]. 1119 41

Tuberous sclerosis (TS) is an autosomal dominant, multisystemic and neurocutaneous disease with high spontaneous mutation rate, and it mostly involves the skin, brain, kidneys, heart and the eyes. This study included 35 patients diagnosed with tuberous sclerosis and aged 6 months to 17 years, with a mean age of 6.5+/-4.8 years. The most frequently observed manifestations were those of the skin (97.1%) and of the central nervous system (seizures 94.2%, mental retardation 51.4%), followed by renal (32.2%), cardiac (25.8%) and ocular (22.5%) manifestations. Among cutaneous manifestations, hypomelanotic macules (94.3%), facial angiofibromas (40%), shagreen spots (20%), fibrous plaques on the forehead (5.7%) and ungula fibromas (5.7%) were observed. Tonic seizures (37.1%) and infantile spasms (21.2%) accounted for majority of seizures. Neurophysiological development was normal in 25.6% of cases, retarded in 51.4% and borderline in 23%. Thirty-four patients had typical pathological findings on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). In conclusion, the earliest and most frequent complaint is seizure in cases with TS. Careful investigation for hypomelanotic macules and other skin manifestations typical for TS in cases presenting with convulsion makes early diagnosis possible and obviates unnecessary investigations.
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PMID:Clinical features of tuberous sclerosis cases. 1202 15

Lennox-Gastaut syndrome is an epileptic encephalopathy characterized by multiple seizure types, mental retardation, and a slow spike-and-wave pattern on electroencephalography. Medical intractability is common. We identified a case series of six patients diagnosed with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome in which levetiracetam was initiated as add-on therapy for the management of seizures. At follow-up, four patients experienced 100% reduction of their myoclonic seizures; two patients had greater than 50% reduction of their atonic seizures, and four patients experienced 100% reduction in their generalized tonic-clonic seizures. Tonic seizures were not responsive to treatment. The most common side effect was irritability; the most positive change involved alertness. In this small sample, levetiracetam appeared effective in reducing seizures in Lennox-Gastaut syndrome. This preliminary study is limited by its retrospective design and small number of patients, but positive findings warrant a larger scale, multicenter study.
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PMID:Levetiracetam in the treatment of Lennox-Gastaut syndrome. 1508 3

The 1p36 deletion syndrome is caused by submicroscopic deletion in the subtelomeric region of chromosome 1. Epilepsy is one of the most important features of the syndrome, in addition to the characteristic facial appearance, cardiac anomaly, dysphagia, deafness, mental retardation and growth delay. We identified three patients with this syndrome and assessed the features of complicated epilepsy. In all cases, epilepsy developed during infancy. The seizure types were mainly focal seizure and multiple seizure types including tonic seizure and tonic-clonic seizure. Interictal electroencephalogram showed focal abnormalities. Noticeably, two developed epileptic spasms and hypsarrhythmia in electroencephalogram, just after the administration of carbamazepine (CBZ). Including cases showing epileptic spasms, their epilepsy was easily tractable with anti-epileptic drugs, which could be withdrawn as they aged. All had deleted potassium channel beta subunit (KCNAB2) and gamma-aminobutyric acid A receptor delta (GABRD). CBZ may aggravate various epileptic syndromes, especially, those caused by GABA-A receptor gene mutation. Our cases may suggest the novel correspondence of GABA-A receptor-related epilepsy syndrome and exacerbation of epilepsy triggered by CBZ.
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PMID:[Effect of carbamazepine on epilepsy with 1p36 deletion syndrome]. 1763 87