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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (seizures)
80,221 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Following neonatal ischaemic brain injury, irregular vessels increase in size owing to luxury perfusion. These may be demonstrated by conventional colour flow Doppler (CFD) imaging at the periphery of the infarcted area. We present a case in which power Doppler imaging (PDI) was performed in addition to CFD in a neonate with unexplained seizures and which proved more sensitive than CFD in demonstrating luxury perfusion. Ultrasound appearances were compared with those seen on cranial CT. PDI can be a useful adjunct to conventional CFD examination of the neonatal brain in cerebral infarction.
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PMID:Power Doppler ultrasound appearances of neonatal ischaemic brain injury. 902 48

Headache can be an invaluable premonitory signal of imminent subarachnoid hemorrhage and cerebral infarction and can herald the onset of ominous and sometimes elusive disorders (arterial dissection, encephalitis, systemic and central vasculitides, and cerebral venous thrombosis) which have the potential for neurologic catastrophe and are often not obvious on routine CT brain imaging. Only rarely does serious underlying disease give rise to a headache that exactly mimics a migraine or tension headache. Inevitably, there are atypical features or warning signals. A limited number of serious causes for headache which may be "CT-negative" should be considered in patients with "red flag" manifestations, such as seizures and cognitive changes. These should prompt further investigation with MRI and/or lumbar puncture.
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PMID:Headache as a symptom of ominous disease. What are the warning signals? 915 6

A 2-month-old girl with incontinentia pigmenti presented with acute-onset right-handed focalized seizures and subsequent seizure generalization. Computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging and single photon emission computed tomography results indicated that she had multiple cerebral infarctions. These findings suggest that incontinentia pigmenti should be included among the neurocutaneous syndromes associated with ischemic strokes in childhood. This is the first report of a case with incontinentia pigmenti associated with cerebral infarction evaluated by single photon emission computed tomography.
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PMID:Cerebral infarction in incontinentia pigmenti: the first report of a case evaluated by single photon emission computed tomography. 920 6

Neonatal seizures in the neonatal period are symptoms of numerous underlying disorders of the neonate. We present a case in which neonatal seizures due to cerebral infarction led to a diagnosis in the mother. Neonatal convulsions caused by cerebral artery thrombosis is relatively rare in the neonatal period and is often secondary to indwelling intravascular catheters that cause thromboembolism, but may be associated with many conditions.1 Cerebral artery thrombosis in newborns, in which antiphospholipid antibodies (APA) were found in the mother, has been described in three case reports. Two of these premature infants were born with other risk factors for thrombosis. APA could not be identified in any of these three infants. In the two cases reported by Silver et al the diagnosis was made several months after birth. This case is unique in the fact that no other risk factors for thrombosis could be identified to explain the infarction, and that APA were found in the offspring of an apparently healthy mother. Whether the prior fetal death was caused by APA remains unclear. The finding of lupus anticoagulant in her child led to the diagnosis of antiphospholipid antibody syndrome in her. We believe that in case of cerebral artery thrombosis in a neonate, with no trivial cause such as an indwelling catheter or sepsis, both mother and infant should be tested for presence of APA, even when the mother seems healthy.
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PMID:An unusual cause of neonatal seizures in a newborn infant. 931 May 41

We studied subsidiary laboratorial tests such as serum glucose, red blood cell count, total cholesterol, HDL and LDL cholesterol and triglycerides, electrocardiogram, electroencephalogram (EEG), cerebrospinal fluid, and CT scan of 35 patients with cerebral infarction who developed epileptic seizures (group 1 or G1), and compared them to a group of 35 patients who had cerebral infarction but have not developed epileptic seizures (group 2 or G2). The EEG analysis showed significance in the comparison between the groups; focal identification of the electrical cerebral activity was the most frequent abnormality found in G1. Extensive infarcts were also more frequent in G1. The association of abnormal EEG and extensive lesion on CT may be considered a preditive factor for occurrence of epileptic seizures after cerebral infarction. The analysis of the other tests showed no significance on the comparison between the groups.
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PMID:[Subsidiary predictive tests in epileptic crisis after ischemic stroke]. 933 59

Positron emission tomography (PET) has been widely used in the study of stroke and related cerebrovascular diseases. It has shown the various stages leading to cerebral infarction and defined the significance of the ischaemic penumbra. PET scan can predict the clinical outcome of patients with acute ischaemic stroke. Several types of diaschisis can also be demonstrated by PET. They reflect different pathophysiological changes in supratentorial infarcts. Post-apoplectic seizures are shown to increase the ischaemic damage in the affected cerebral hemisphere. PET has contributed also to the concept of multi-infarct dementia, although the significance of chronic ischaemia in the pathogenesis of vascular dementia has not been fully investigated.
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PMID:Is positron emission tomography useful in stroke? 934 87

Neurological symptoms in childhood miliary tuberculosis are generally caused by underlying tuberculous meningitis (TBM), since the 2 conditions commonly occur concurrently. Cerebral infarction, a well-recognized complication of TBM, usually results from tuberculous periarteritis and secondary thrombosis. Neuropathological studies have demonstrated that the anterior cerebral circulation is more commonly affected than the arteries of the vertebro-basilar system, and basilar artery occlusion as a presenting manifestation of childhood miliary tuberculosis or TBM has not been described before. We report a 13-month-old infant who presented with fever and convulsions, terminating in acute decerebration after a second prolonged seizure 1 week after the onset of symptoms. Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging demonstrated density changes compatible with acute vertebro-basilar ischemia as well as multiple cerebral granulomas. A chest radiograph showed diffuse miliary tuberculosis. Postmortem examination confirmed this diagnosis and revealed acute occlusion of the basilar artery by an infected (septic) thromboembolus showing granulomatous inflammation, which most likely arose from an endocardial vegetation with identical histology.
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PMID:Acute stroke in a child with miliary tuberculosis. 940 96

To both clarify the current clinico-epidemiological features of Moyamoya disease in Korea as well as compare these cases with Japanese patients, 451 cases were collected from 26 Korean major neurosurgical institutes and 296 definite cases were analyzed statistically. Although the Korean age distribution patterns of Moyamoya disease showed two peaks, similar to Japanese patients, the Korean pattern was shifted to the right thus indicating Korean adult population to be 20% higher than that of Japanese patients. The female/male ratio was 1:3, which was slightly less than that for Japanese. The family occurrence rate in Koreans was 1.8%. The incidence of cerebral infarction and bleeding in Koreans was higher while transient ischemic attack (TIA) and seizure were less than that of Japanese. The incidence of infarction in children and of hemorrhage in children and adults were also statistically higher in Koreans. The incidence of hemorrhage was higher in females than in males. Both the age at onset and sex affected the disease type. Single encephalo-duro-arterio-synangiosis (EDAS) was performed on 87.6% of all surgical cases. Although the incidence of bleeding was higher in Korea, the outcomes of the patients were similar to that of the Japanese patients. Although Korean Moyamoya disease showed a relatively higher incidence of hemorrhage and adult onset, the overall clinical background was similar to that of Japanese patients.
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PMID:Epidemiological survey of moyamoya disease in Korea. 940 96

To determine the clinical characteristics and the effectiveness of encephalo-duro-arterio-synangiosis (EDAS) in adulthood-onset Moyamoya disease (MMD), the authors retrospectively reviewed 26 patients suffering from MMD who were admitted to Seoul National University Hospital between 1987 and 1995. When they showed major symptoms, all were more than 16 years-old. The most common presenting symptom was intracranial hemorrhage (ICrH), found in 12 patients or 46% of the total; the second was infarction and transient ischemic attack, each found in seven or 27% of them. Only one patient was found to have seizures, which were associated with a cerebral infarction. The Suzuki angiographic stage 3 and less than stage 3 accounted for 73% of all 52 hemispheres. A total of 15 patients underwent single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) preoperatively. When the derangement of cerebral perfusion was estimated with four SPECT grades (SG), 70% of their hemispheres revealed normal (SG1) or localized decreased-perfusion (SG2). The other 30% had extensive decreased-perfusion or localized perfusion defects (SG3). There was no case who had extensive perfusion defects (SG4). A total of 17 patients underwent EDAS operations (EDAS group) and nine did not undergo any operation (no-op group). The EDAS group had significantly better clinical outcomes than the no-op group after a 12-month median follow-up period (P < 0.05). The angiographic and SPECT follow-up studies comprised six and seven cases, respectively. There was also satisfactory angiographic revascularization in all follow-up cases and improvement in cerebral perfusion at SPECT follow-up in six of seven cases. It is concluded that the involvement of posterior circulation of MMD is not frequent and cerebral perfusion is preserved in adulthood-onset MMD patients. These findings may explain the reason why hemorrhages are frequent and the late onset of symptoms in adulthood-onset MMD. Surgical treatment with EDAS seems to be effective in adulthood-onset MMD in terms of clinical improvement.
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PMID:Moyamoya disease in adults: characteristics of clinical presentation and outcome after encephalo-duro-arterio-synangiosis. 940 27

Although hypercalcemia may cause drowsiness, lethargy, weakness, confusion and coma it rarely causes seizures or cerebral infarction. The patient presented had a clinical evolution from hallucinosis to a generalized tonic-clonic seizure, and subsequent cortical blindness with occipital cerebral ischemia as evidenced by SPECT and MRI scans. EEG revealed occipital PLEDs. With reversal of hypercalcemia, there was a return of vision, resolution of EEG epileptiform activity, although with some residual occipital infarction. This case, in concert with a literature review of hypercalcemia, reveals examples of occipital and watershed ischemia, blindness, seizures and hypertension, a pattern markedly similar to that of eclampsia. Furthermore, medications such as magnesium sulfate, believed to reverse cerebrovasospasm responsible for the eclamptic neurologic findings, may counter the effects of hypercalcemia at a cellular level, lending support to a calcium-mediated injury in eclampsia.
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PMID:Reversible hypercalcemic cerebral vasoconstriction with seizures and blindness: a paradigm for eclampsia? 966 11


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