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

This research was an attempt to determine the cerebral areas involved in focal epileptic seizures accompanied by psychic manifestations. Six types of partial seizures involving psychic symptomatology and phonatory seizures were included in the study. Sixty-one clinical records of focal epilepsy, which had been revealed by means of a CT-scan examination, were analyzed and a subsample of 25 patients with psychic symptoms was selected. The scans taken of the lesions were transferred to a six-level standard template built for this purpose. Subsequently, templates of patients with the same type of seizures were superimposed. The critical zones for the seven types of seizures studied are presented. A clear correlation was found between these results and our present knowledge of functional brain organization.
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PMID:Partial psychic seizures and brain organization. 374 11

The authors have followed six children with atypical epilepsies but a favorable evolution, consisting in minor motor seizures of the myoclonic-astatic type (with diffuse slow spike-waves on the electroencephalogram) together with clinical and EEG features seen in benign focal epilepsy of childhood (BFEC), an association recently reported by Aicardi and Chevrie (1982). The maintenance of a normal neurological function despite severe epilepsy, the absence of tonic seizures and the marked activation of the spike discharges during sleep were described by these authors as important characteristics suggesting a good prognosis. The purpose of this study was to see if these children indeed represent a particular subgroup of idiopathic epilepsy and to draw attention to a special clinical and EEG combination indicating a possibly favorable ultimate outcome, in children usually diagnosed as suffering from Lennox-Gastaut syndrome. The six cases closely resembled the group described by Aicardi and Chevrie (1982), although the clinical and EEG features of BFEC were not as striking as in their cases. Also transient mental deterioration occurred during the active seizure periods. The therapeutic benefit of the various drugs tried was difficult to assess, but the behavior was often perturbed by medication. Although it is not possible to decide at the present time if these cases represent a particular epileptic syndrome, the special combination of clinical and EEG features seems characteristic enough to justify prospective studies of similar cases in the future.
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PMID:Combined myoclonic-astatic and "benign" focal epilepsy of childhood ("atypical benign partial epilepsy of childhood"). A separate syndrome? 376 71

The effect of two doses (5 micrograms/microliters) of kainic acid (KA) injected intracortically into the posterior lateral gyrus of cats was investigated. KA in a dose of 5 micrograms/microliters provoked cortical epileptogenic focus 8-12 min after its application, developing later into a focal seizure. Administration of 10 micrograms/microliters KA resulted after 15-20 sec in paroxysmal discharges of spikes and sharp-slow waves at the site of the application, which propagated ipsilaterally. Thereafter the paroxysmal activity spread contralaterally, became generalized and developed into an epileptic state. The effect of KA was considered to be a dose-dependent one. N-Aminomethylpiperazine-3, 3-diethyl-2, 4-pyridinedione (DKMP) in a dose of 100 mg/kg injected i.v. on the background of developed epileptic state exerted a rapid inhibitory effect of 60-100 min duration on the paroxysmal activity. employed as a model of secondary generalized focal epilepsy.
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PMID:Epileptogenic effect of intracortically applied kainic acid in cats. 383 33

Positron emission tomography (PET) was performed in 18 temporal lobe epileptics. About 20 mCi of 11C-glucose was perorally administered to the patients and 30 minutes later scanning was started when the transport of 11C-glucose from blood to the brain tissue reached equilibrium. At the level of 25 mm above orbitomeatal line, the slice image of the temporal lobe shows a relatively high metabolic oval ring involving the amygdala, hippocapal formation and the hippocampal gyrus medially and the T1, T2 and T3 neocortices laterally in normal subjects. The epileptic focus, when detected on PET images, was observed as a defect in this oval ring. In 15(83.3%) out of 18 cases, the location of epileptic focus was confirmed as a low metabolic defect. This diagnosis rate was higher than that of other focal epilepsy by PET study. The locations of foci were divided into three types: mesial (5 cases), lateral (4 cases) and combined (6 cases). The seizure symptoms of the patients were analyzed in terms of the correspondence to the focus types. The results showed that automatism and pseudoabsence had a close relation to the mesial and combined types and psychical, vertiginous or visual seizures correlated to the combined and lateral types. Visceral or motor seizures were induced equally by any focus types. These facts suggested that automatism and pseudoabsence were correlated with the mesial organs such as the amygdala and hippocampus and psychical, vertiginous or visual seizures had origin in lateral neocortices. Visceral or motor seizures were supposed to be the results of the spread from the temporal focus to the adjacent structures.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Diagnosis of temporal lobe epilepsy by positron emission tomography]. 387 60

We investigated the relationships among the electroencephalographic spiking rate, drug levels, and seizure occurrence in 44 patients with focal epilepsy. Seizure occurrence was continuously monitored by personnel or videorecording and spiking rate was quantified by an automatic detection method. Results indicate that drug levels do not influence spiking rate, and spiking rate does not change before seizures but increases markedly after them, particularly secondarily generalized seizures. This increase can last several days and is observed during wakefulness and sleep. High or low spiking rates do not influence the occurrence of seizures. We suggest that interictal spikes may passively reflect damage to the brain, a damage which is worsened by further seizures. Spikes may not be directly related to seizure generation.
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PMID:Electroencephalographic spiking activity, drug levels, and seizure occurrence in epileptic patients. 392 18

Electrical stimulation of the human olfactory mucosa was performed by means of an electrode, which was attached to a rhinoscope. Stimulations of the nasal mucosa did not evoke the sensation of smell, but suppressed smell sensations of presented odorants. When electrical stimulation followed the exposure to an odorant within a certain interval, the stimulus recalled the faded sensation of the preceding odorant. Electrical stimulation without prior natural stimulation produced unpleasant sensations in three patients with a history of temporal lobe seizures and olfactory auras, but not in patients with primary generalized or focal epilepsy.
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PMID:[Electric stimulation of the human olfactory nerve--an approach to short-term memory?]. 392 40

The possibility of a role for the inhibitory neurotransmitter gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) in seizure disorders has been strengthened by biochemical studies showing that various nervous system depressant drugs can modulate GABA receptor binding in vitro. In particular, two classes of anticonvulsant agents, the benzodiazepines and the barbiturates, have modulatory receptor sites on the GABA receptor-ionophore protein complex of the postsynaptic membrane. Furthermore, it is well established that direct block of GABA function causes seizures and that augmentation of GABA function can protect against seizure activity. Direct evidence for altered GABA synaptic markers has been obtained in some animal models of epilepsy, as well as in human focal epilepsy. We present preliminary evidence for a deficit in benzodiazepine receptor binding in the midbrain of seizure-susceptible Mongolian gerbils. These data would be consistent with an impairment of GABA-mediated inhibitory synaptic transmission that contributes to susceptibility to the genesis or spread of seizures in some kinds of epilepsy.
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PMID:Role of the gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor-ionophore complex in seizure disorders. 615 Jun 84

Clinical and EEG changes were studied in 12 children affected by infantile cerebral palsy and generalized or focal epilepsy, during and after halothane anaesthesia induced by orthopaedic surgery. The anaesthesia was induced by inhalation of halothane 1.5%, and maintained with halothane 0.5%. During anaesthesia a decrease of the incidence of epileptic abnormalities was observed in 10 patients. In the other 2 children no changes were seen. At the end of surgery, when the anaesthetic was gradually suspended, there was a notable increase of epileptic abnormalities in 4 children. Clinical seizures were never observed during or shortly after surgery. In the majority of the cases, the EEGs performed 1 week later did not show modifications of epileptic abnormalities, as compared to the preoperative EEGs. Only in a few patients the epileptic activity was modified. The data show that halothane anaesthesia can be used in epileptic children without risking activation of seizures.
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PMID:EEG and clinical features in epileptic children during halothane anaesthesia. 617 15

Impaired GABA-mediated inhibition is probably one of the cellular abnormalities leading to Focal Epilepsy. The role of GABA in generalized seizures, particularly of Petit Mal type, is unknown. Various approaches are available to potentiate GABA function. Merits and flaws of each one of them are critically evaluated. In some forms of epilepsy, GABA agonists may replenish depleted pools, and in some others may nonspecifically raise the general excitability threshold of the brain, yet in other forms they may exert a glutamate/aspartate antagonistic effect. The available experimental evidence suggests that in bilaterally synchronous spike and wave epilepsies, GABA agonists are either ineffective or pejorative.
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PMID:The perspective of GABA replenishment therapy in the epilepsies: a critical evaluation of hopes and concerns. 631 78

Absence status manifested by compulsive masturbation occurred in a 41-year-old man with generalized epilepsy. Ictal simple and complex sexual manifestations during partial seizures in focal epilepsy are rare, but, to our knowledge, our report of this sexual automatism during absence status in generalized epilepsy is unique.
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PMID:Absence status manifested by compulsive masturbation. 640 63


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