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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (
seizures
)
80,221
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Epilepsy represents a serious medical and social problem. In the majority of cases,
seizures
are successfully managed by a variety of anticonvulsant medications, even though these drugs may potentiate significant physical and developmental side effects. A small group of studies to date have offered evidence that behavioral procedures can successfully manage some
seizure
disorders and are particularly desirable treatment choices when
seizure
disorders are intractable to drug management or when drug side effects are to be avoided. The present case adds to this small but growing group of studies in that it demonstrates the use of behavioral procedures in the analysis and treatment of high-rate myoclonic
seizures
.
Seizures
were evaluated on a hospital ward and in a controlled experimental setting. The data indicated a variable rate of
seizures
across days and activities and a reduction of
seizure
frequency in the controlled setting when time-out was made contingent on
seizures
. A program of contingent rest' was then applied on the hospital ward that demonstrated a reduction in
myoclonic seizure
frequency and the apparent prevention of several grand mal episodes. An observer calibration procedure showed high correspondence between behaviorally and physiologically recorded
seizures
. A discussion of issues in behavioral medicine research follows.
...
PMID:A behavior analysis approach to high-rate myoclonic seizures. 11 52
A follow-up study has been made of 25 cases with infantile spasms, all of whom were six years old or more at review. Only four (16%) out of 25 cases made a full recovery and attended normal school. Spasms ceased in 96% of all cases, but fits other than spasms (grand mal, tonic seizure, atonic seizure,
myoclonic seizure
, atypical absence and psychomotor
seizure
) occurred subsequently in 11 cases (44%). The EEG became normal in two cases (8%), but still showed modified hypsarhythmia in three cases (12%), "epileptic non-hypsarhythmic" discharges in 17 cases (68%) and non-specific abnormalities in three cases (12%). The important factors associated with good prognosis were normal development before the onset of spasms, late onset (seven months old or over) and short duration of spasms, the absence of other types of fit following spasms and lack of neurological abnormality. A bad prognosis was associated with abnormal development prior to the onset of spasms, early onset and long duration of spasms, the presence of other types of fit following spasms and evidence of any neyrological abnormality This follow-up may confirm that the therapy with ACTH-A has no significant effect on final mental state.
...
PMID:The long-term prognosis infantile spasms--the present condition of cases of infantile spasms followed in school age. 18 71
The role of physiological changes occurring during prolonged
seizures
in the causation of epileptic brain damage has been investigated experimentally in baboons and rats. Prolonged drug-induced
myoclonic seizure
activity is associated with initial arterial hypertension and subsequent hypotension, increased venous pressure, early hyperglycaemia and subsequent hypoglycaemia, variable arterial hypoxia and lactacidosis, and hyperpyrexia. Cerebral metabolic rate for oxygen and glucose is increased 2--3 fold throughout prolonged
seizures
provided the physiological status of the animal is well maintained. Ischaemic neuronal change is found after
seizures
lasting 1.5--7 hours, involving the small neurones of the third cortical lamina, Purkinje and basket cells in the cerebellum, and pyramidal neurons in the endfolium and Sommer sector of the hippocampus. Muscular paralysis and artificial ventilation minimise late physiological changes such as arterial hypotension and hyperpyrexia, and protect against cerebellar damage, but only slightly against neocortical and hippocampal damage. When arterial hypotension, hypoxia or hypoglycaemia lead to a reduction in the intensity of
seizure
discharge in paralysed, ventilated rats, there is also a reduction in hippocampal and neocortical damage. Factors intimately related to the intensity and duration of the neuronal discharge are responsible for neocortical and hippocampal lesions.
...
PMID:Physiological changes during prolonged seizures and epileptic brain damage. 58 96
The antiepileptic efficiency of dipropylacetate (DPA) was studied in 80 epileptic children who suffered either from
seizures
resistant to previous medication, so-called idiopathic epilepsy or progressive
myoclonus epilepsy
. The average peroral daily dosage of DPA was 21 mg/kg divided into 2 to 3 doses. DPA was most effective in cases with 1) so-called idiopathic epilepsy (genuine petit mal, photogenic epilepsy, myoclonic petit mal in older children), 2)
seizures
beginning in later childhood years, 3) photosensitive and hyperventilation-sensitive
seizures
, 4) EEG showing symmetric generalized spike-slow wave complexes provoked by photostimulation, 5) EEG without generalized disturbance or focal findings, 6) normal neurological and mental status, 7) progressive
myoclonus epilepsy
. DPA may thus be recommended for the treatment of the above-mentioned cases and, due to good treatment results, also tried in other types of epilepsy.
...
PMID:Experiences on the use of dipropylacetate in the treatment of childhood epilepsy. 81 72
Childhood epilepsies (not including the first 2 years of life) are outlined and discussed; particular emphasis is laid upon the variety of certain forms of epileptic conditions and their clinical course. These forms are divided as follows: a) The Lennox-Gastaut syndrome: a poly-etiological condition with distinct clinical-ictal and electroencephalographic characteristics, mostly associated with mental defects and prognostically unfavorable. b) "Common generalized epilepsy" (also called "centrencephalic" epilepsy), characterized by petit mal absences or a combination of petit mal and grand mal and with a predominantly favorable prognosis. c)Childhood epilepsies with focal spikes in the EEG, in most cases a very benign form with an excellent prognosis. These 3 forms of
seizure
disorders may be divided in subgroups. The distinction of fine diagnostic nuances is quite helpful but requires well integrated epileptological and EEG experience. The special role of temporal lobe epilepsy is briefly discussed. Furthermore, several etiologies of childhood etiologies are singled out such as inborn errors of metabolism (lipidoses, amino-acidurias), essential hereditary
myoclonus epilepsy
, tuberous sclerosis, Sturg-Weber's disease, encephalitis, brain tumor and brain abscess. The fringe of the
seizure
("borderland of epilepsy") is briefly delineated.
...
PMID:[Epilepsies in childhood: differential diagnosis of their forms and courses (author's transl)]. 82 45
The long-term prognosis of 185 children with epilepsy, who continued to attend the Clinic for Epileptic Children, the Department of Pediatrics, the University of Tokyo, beyond the age of 18 years, was reported. The length of follow-up varied from three to 20 years, but most of them were followed longer than 10 years. The presumed etiology in these children was divided into a cryptogenic group (124, 67.0%) and a symptomatic group (61). The types of
seizures
were classified into grand mal (86 cases), focal
seizure
(27), petit mal absence (4), psychomotro
seizure
(5), infantile spasms (7), and so on. It may be noted that the highest frequency of grand mal was demonstrated, while the incidences of infantile spasms,
myoclonic seizure
, and akinetic
seizure
were low in the series. Only 28 children (15.1%) had complications of physical and/or mental handicaps. The follow-up study revealed that 140 patients (75.7%) had been
seizure
-free in the last 12 months. One hundred and fifteen of them had no
seizures
for five years or longer. On the other hand, electroencephalographic abnormalities generally continued for a long time after disappearance of
seizures
. Eightly-one of well-controlled patients were gradually decreasing the doses of anticonvulsants. As for
seizure
types, it is noted that focal
seizure
, psychomotor
seizure
, and infantile spasms were relatively difficult to be controlled. Except for 27 patients, most of them attended normal schools, including junior colleges or universities, and engaged in various occupations. Fifteen female patients had already married, and out of 13 babies who were born from these patients, there were one with ventricular septal defect, one with mental deficiency, and one with anencephaly, while the rest were entirely normal. Additional problems on withdrawal of anticonvulsants after a long-term
seizure
-free period, and what a medical system should be for treatment of epilepsy in children up to their adulthood were discussed.
...
PMID:Long-term prognosis of epilepsy in children--a follow-up report beyond 18 years of age. 99 13
Neurological dysfunction,
seizures
and brain atrophy occur in a broad spectrum of acute and chronic neurological diseases. In certain instances, over-stimulation of N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors has been implicated. Quinolinic acid (QUIN) is an endogenous N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor agonist synthesized from L-tryptophan via the kynurenine pathway and thereby has the potential of mediating N-methyl-D-aspartate neuronal damage and dysfunction. Conversely, the related metabolite, kynurenic acid, is an antagonist of N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors and could modulate the neurotoxic effects of QUIN as well as disrupt excitatory amino acid neurotransmission. In the present study, markedly increased concentrations of QUIN were found in both lumbar cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and post-mortem brain tissue of patients with inflammatory diseases (bacterial, viral, fungal and parasitic infections, meningitis, autoimmune diseases and septicaemia) independent of breakdown of the blood-brain barrier. The concentrations of kynurenic acid were also increased, but generally to a lesser degree than the increases in QUIN. In contrast, no increases in CSF QUIN were found in chronic neurodegenerative disorders, depression or
myoclonic seizure
disorders, while CSF kynurenic acid concentrations were significantly lower in Huntington's disease and Alzheimer's disease. In inflammatory disease patients, proportional increases in CSF L-kynurenine and reduced L-tryptophan accompanied the increases in CSF QUIN and kynurenic acid. These responses are consistent with induction of indoleamine-2,3-dioxygenase, the first enzyme of the kynurenine pathway which converts L-tryptophan to kynurenic acid and QUIN. Indeed, increases in both indoleamine-2,3-dioxygenase activity and QUIN concentrations were observed in the cerebral cortex of macaques infected with retrovirus, particularly those with local inflammatory lesions. Correlations between CSF QUIN, kynurenic acid and L-kynurenine with markers of immune stimulation (neopterin, white blood cell counts and IgG levels) indicate a relationship between accelerated kynurenine pathway metabolism and the degree of intracerebral immune stimulation. We conclude that inflammatory diseases are associated with accumulation of QUIN, kynurenic acid and L-kynurenine within the central nervous system, but that the available data do not support a role for QUIN in the aetiology of Huntington's disease or Alzheimer's disease. In conjunction with our previous reports that CSF QUIN concentrations are correlated to objective measures of neuropsychological deficits in HIV-1-infected patients, we hypothesize that QUIN and kynurenic acid are mediators of neuronal dysfunction and nerve cell death in inflammatory diseases. Therefore, strategies to attenuate the neurological effects of kynurenine pathway metabolites or attenuate the rate of their synthesis offer new approaches to therapy.
...
PMID:Quinolinic acid and kynurenine pathway metabolism in inflammatory and non-inflammatory neurological disease. 142 88
Kindled
seizures
evoked by electrical stimulation of limbic pathways in the rat induce sprouting and synaptic reorganization of the mossy fiber pathway in the dentate gyrus (DG). To investigate whether
seizures
evoked by different methods also induce reorganization of this pathway, the distribution of mossy fiber terminals in the DG was examined with Timm histochemistry after systemic administration of pentylenetetrazol, a chemoconvulsant that reduces Cl- mediated GABAergic inhibition.
Myoclonic seizures
evoked by subconvulsant doses of pentylenetetrazol (24 mg/kg i.p.) were not accompanied by electrographic
seizures
in the DG, and did not induce mossy fiber sprouting. Generalized tonic-clonic seizures evoked by repeated administration of PTZ (24 mg/kg i.p.) were consistently accompanied by electrographic
seizure
activity in the DG, and induced sprouting and synaptic reorganization of the mossy fiber pathway. The results demonstrated that repeated generalized tonic-clonic
seizures
evoked by pentylenetetrazol induced mossy fiber synaptic reorganization when ictal electrographic discharges activated the circuitry of the DG.
...
PMID:Activation of the dentate gyrus by pentylenetetrazol evoked seizures induces mossy fiber synaptic reorganization. 145 Sep 33
Four siblings aged 12-18 years with progressive
myoclonus epilepsy
demonstrated a subclinical stage at the age of 9-11 years, with visual blackouts and polyspike electroencephalographic (EEG) activity on photic stimulation, an early myoclonic stage at the age of 12-15 years, with increasing segmental, stimulus-sensitive myoclonus, occasional nocturnal buildup myoclonic "cascade"
seizures
, slowing of EEG alpha-activity, episodic 4-6 Hz bilateral sharp waves and polyspikes with myoclonias on photic stimulation, and a disabling myoclonic stage at the age of 16-18 years, with periodic generalized myoclonias, nocturnal myoclonic "cascade"
seizures
, ataxia, dysarthria, mental changes, intermittent wheelchair dependency, and continuous EEG slow waves with polyspikes and intense myoclonias on photic stimulation. One of the siblings died at the age of 18 years with no apparent cause of death. Treatment with antiepileptic drugs other than valproate may have contributed but none of the siblings were ever treated with phenytoin. Extensive clinical and laboratory investigations revealed no abnormalities and excluded other known possible causes of progressive
myoclonus epilepsy
. The diagnosis was consistent with Unverricht-Lundborg disease and rested on typical age of onset, clinical signs, EEG, and evoked response abnormalities. Buildup myoclonic
seizures
are typical in advanced stages of Unverricht-Lundborg disease. We have labeled these myoclonic "cascade"
seizures
. A typical
seizure
was studied with video-EEG and cardiorespiratory monitoring. Characteristics revealed were onset with continuous arrhythmic myoclonic jerks followed by intense rhythmic myoclonus with increasing muscle tone that successively reduced the amplitude of the jerks. The EEG during the whole
seizure
showed intense polyspike activity. Obstructive apnea was seen at the peak of the
seizure
. There were no cardiac dysrhythmias. Consciousness was normal or only slightly impaired. Postictal drowsiness was not observed. Myoclonic "cascade"
seizures
are easily confused with generalized tonic-clonic
seizures
.
...
PMID:Clinical and neurophysiological development of Unverricht-Lundborg disease in four Swedish siblings. 174 64
Sleep is known to facilitate epileptic manifestations but can also protect the sleeper against the recurrence of
seizures
. This has been demonstrated in studies on sleep deprivation, and is particularly evident in alcoholic epilepsy and matutinal
myoclonus epilepsy
. Sleep organization in the epileptic patient is permanently altered by frequent awakenings and stage shifts. Nocturnal grand mal and repetitive partial
seizures
worsen the sleep disorder by reducing total sleep time and decreasing REM percentage by half. The cumulative effect of these sleep disorders may act on day-time vigilance in epileptics, and may even exert an influence on the recurrence of
seizures
.
...
PMID:Sleep organization and epilepsy. 176 99
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