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

Six infants with dysmorphic features of the fetal alcohol syndrome presented with symptoms of withdrawal from alcohol similar to those observed in adults and animals. Symptoms were characterized by irritability, tremors, spontaneous seizures, opisthotonos, and abdominal distention. A comparison of symptoms is made to animal and withdrawal from ethanol and to the neonatal narcotic withdrawal syndrome.
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PMID:Withdrawal symptoms in infants with the fetal alcohol syndrome. 83 82

The study reports the findings of a follow-up review of 38 trainees who had completed social skills training programmes run by BRAINWAVE The Irish Epilepsy Association and FAS, the state training and employment authority, during the period 1986 to 1990. The social skills programmes were aimed at young, unqualified school leavers. A total of 101 young people completed the programmes, 45 of whom had epilepsy. Of those with epilepsy, 38 were interviewed about their current employment position. On completion of the programmes 58% had found a job or gone on to further training. At the time of interview 39% were in work or training. Fifty-eight per cent were still experiencing seizures (a seizure in the last 12 months). Fifty per cent of those interviewed felt that they were being actively discriminated against because of their epilepsy. Fifty-eight per cent had made contact with the National Rehabilitation Board, the state placement service for people with a disability, but only 36% of these were in training or employment at the time of interview. Sixty-six per cent of those interviewed had found the programmes helpful in terms of increasing their self-confidence and social skills. The study points to the need for more specialized training and job placement programmes for young people with epilepsy.
Seizure 1992 Jun
PMID:Employment among young people with epilepsy. 134 27

Seven hundred five cases of agenesis of the corpus callosum (ACC) are reviewed from the literature (n = 660) and from our own observations (n = 45). The diagnosis was made or confirmed using neuroradiological techniques (n = 519) and necropsy or surgery (n = 231). Association with abnormalities often of chromosomes 8, 11, 13-15 and 18 suggests their involvement in abnormal corpus callosum (CC) morphogenesis. Four syndromes (e.g. Aicardi, acrocallosal, Andermann and Shapiro) are characterized by ACC, while others are only sporadically associated (e.g. fetal alcohol syndrome, Dandy-Walker syndrome, Leigh disease, Arnold-Chiari II syndrome). In non-Aicardi patients, the male-to-female ratio was 3:2 and X-linked recessive inheritance is postulated to play a role in some cases. Common abnormalities in acallosal patients included: mental retardation (MR), 73% [corrected]; seizures, 42%; ocular anomalies, 42%; gyral abnormalities, 32%; hydrocephalus, 23%; other central nervous system (CNS) lesions, 29%; costovertebral defects, 24%. Developmental disabilities are not attributable to absence of the CC per se, but due to other CNS malformation or dysfunction, which may be genetic or non-genetic. Future research using recombinant DNA techniques will enable isolation and identification of specific chromosomal defects in those cases with a genetic abnormality.
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PMID:Clinicopathological findings associated with agenesis of the corpus callosum. 331 Jul 13

Recent evidence suggests that ethanol abuse produces its diverse effects on the brain to a substantial degree by disrupting the function of the major excitatory neurotransmitter, glutamate. Ethanol, at concentrations associated with behavioral effects in humans, inhibits the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor, which mediates the post-synaptic excitatory effects of glutamate. Tolerance to ethanol results in up-regulation of the NMDA receptor so that abrupt withdrawal produces a hyperexcitable state that leads to seizures, delerium tremens, and excitotoxic neuronal death. Ethanol's inhibition of the NMDA receptor in the fetal brain likely contributes to the CNS manifestations of fetal alcohol syndrome. Therapeutic strategies aimed at correcting glutamatergic dysregulation in alcoholism need to be explored.
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PMID:The role of glutamatergic neurotransmission in the pathophysiology of alcoholism. 950 57

In the immature mammalian brain during a period of rapid growth (brain growth spurt/synaptogenesis period), neuronal apoptosis can be triggered by the transient blockade of glutamate N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptors, or the excessive activation of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA(A)) receptors. Apoptogenic agents include anesthetics (ketamine, nitrous oxide, isoflurane, propofol, halothane), anticonvulsants (benzodiazepines, barbiturates), and drugs of abuse (phencyclidine, ketamine, ethanol). In humans, the brain growth spurt period starts in the sixth month of pregnancy and extends to the third year after birth. Ethanol, which has both NMDA antagonist and GABA(A) agonist properties, is particularly effective in triggering widespread apoptotic neurodegeneration during this vulnerable period. Thus, maternal ingestion of ethanol during the third trimester of pregnancy can readily explain the dysmorphogenic changes in the fetal brain and consequent neurobehavioral disturbances that characterize the human fetal alcohol syndrome. In addition, there is basis for concern that agents used in pediatric and obstetrical medicine for purposes of sedation, anesthesia, and seizure management may cause apoptotic neuronal death in the developing human brain.
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PMID:Neurotransmitters and apoptosis in the developing brain. 1144 48

The utility of verbal (FAS) and nonverbal (Ruff Figural Fluency Test: RFFT) fluency tests for detecting deficits associated with focal seizures and surgical interventions was examined. The patients were 174 adults with intractable epilepsy who underwent epilepsy surgery: 152 temporal lobectomies and 22 frontal lobectomies. The results of the study suggest that the RFFT is somewhat superior to FAS in its ability to discriminate between frontal and temporal seizure foci, and is a useful component of preoperative neuropsychological batteries. Conversely, FAS appears more useful in detecting changes in neurocognitive outcome related to side of surgery. Controlling for postsurgical seizure outcome did not change the results, although continued seizures did have a deleterious effect on both FAS and RFFT, regardless of site of surgery.
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PMID:Verbal and nonverbal fluency performance before and after seizure surgery. 1275 77

The aim of the study was to elucidate the relationship between various stages of amygdala kindling in rats and neuronal apoptosis. We used the unbiased method of RNase protection assay (RPA), measuring expression of several apoptosis-associated genes (for: caspase 1, caspase 2, caspase 3, FAS antigen, bax and bcl-x, bcl-2). The obtained results were also verified in situ in hippocampal slices, using the TUNEL method. The mRNA level of the investigated genes was estimated by densitometry and standardized according to the amount of L32 RNA. Only the expression of bcl-x L, caspase 2, caspase 3 and bax genes was measureable. In all experimental groups, the mRNA levels of bax and bcl-x genes were higher than mRNA of caspase-2 and caspase-3 genes. However, there were no statistically significant differences between the control and kindled animals. On the other hand, the TUNEL positive cells were found in total contralateral hippocampus of investigated animals belonging to C(0) (control group), C(3) (rats with 3rd stage of seizures) and c(5) (rats with 5th stage of seizures) groups. The number of TUNEL positive cells in the hippocampus was significantly higher in C(3) and C(5) groups (4.0 +/- 0.40 and 3.75 +/- 0.49) when compared to C(0) group (1.25 +/- 0.25). In conclusion, although apoptotic cells were found in situ in the hippocampus of kindled rats, RNase protection assay failed to measure any changes in mRNA levels of the chosen apoptotic genes. In our opinion, apoptotic cells might be too rare to detect any changes in gene expression. Therefore, the TUNEL procedure still remains the most favorable method of apoptotic cell death evaluation in the brain structures.
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PMID:Apoptotic markers in various stages of amygdala kindled seizures in rats. 1696 97

To describe associated ocular, neurologic, and systemic findings in a population of children with optic nerve hypoplasia, a retrospective chart review of 100 patients with optic nerve hypoplasia for the presence of neurologic, radiologic, and endocrine abnormalities was performed. Neuroimaging and endocrine studies were obtained in 65 cases. Visual acuity and associated ocular, neurologic, endocrine, systemic, and structural brain abnormalities were recorded. Seventy-five percent had bilateral optic nerve hypoplasia. Conditions previously associated with optic nerve hypoplasia and present in our patients include premature birth in 21%, fetal alcohol syndrome in 9%, maternal diabetes in 6%, and endocrine abnormalities in 6%. Developmental delay was present in 32%, cerebral palsy in 13%, and seizures in 12%. Of those imaged, 60% had an abnormal study. Neuroimaging showed abnormalities in ventricles or white- or gray-matter development in 29 patients, septo-optic dysplasia in 10, hydrocephalus in 10, and corpus callosum abnormalities in 8. There was an associated clinical neurologic abnormality in 57% of patients with bilateral optic nerve hypoplasia and in 32% of patients with unilateral optic nerve hypoplasia. Patients with unilateral and bilateral optic nerve hypoplasia frequently have a wide range and common occurrence of concomitant neurologic, endocrine, and systemic abnormalities.
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PMID:Systemic and ocular findings in 100 patients with optic nerve hypoplasia. 1709 60

In the present study, we provide evidences for a differential effect of perinatal alcohol exposure with a direct correlation to the genetic background on the development of seizures. Ethanol (EtOH) is a widely used psychoactive substance that exerts its action by affecting multiple targets in the central nervous system. EtOH is known to interact with almost all identified neurotransmitters although its effects on excitatory and inhibitory amino acid neurotransmissions are considered to be particularly important in the mediation of its behavioural effects. Prenatal exposure to alcohol is associated with a wide variety of offspring's abnormalities which lead to the so called foetal alcohol syndrome (FAS), which is also related to a higher susceptibility to convulsions. In our study, a rat strain of convulsive epilepsy, the GEPRs rats, displayed an increase of seizure susceptibility after foetal exposure to this teratogenic drug, while a non-convulsive rat strain of absence epilepsy, the WAG/Rij rat, did not fully develop its characteristic features. However, when all groups of rat where tested for pentyletetrazole-induced convulsion, animals perinatally treated with ethanol were less responsive in comparison to their respective controls. These results are in agreement with previous reports showing how the genetic background can directly influence the teratogenic effects of alcohol, and this can be strictly related to the variability in the observation of offspring anomalies in humans which has lead to a 5-category classification system for individuals exposed to alcohol in uterus.
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PMID:Effects of ethanol on the development of genetically determined epilepsies in rats. 1865 28

Seizures are often found in children with fetal alcohol syndrome, but it is not known whether binge drinking during pregnancy by nonalcoholic women is associated with an increased risk of seizure disorders in children. The authors conducted a population-based cohort study of 80,526 liveborn singletons in the Danish National Birth Cohort (1996-2002). Information on maternal binge drinking (intake of > or = 5 drinks on a single occasion) was collected in 2 computer-assisted telephone interviews during pregnancy. Children were followed for up to 8 years. Information on neonatal seizures, epilepsy, and febrile seizures was retrieved from the Danish National Hospital Register. Results showed that exposure to binge drinking episodes during pregnancy was not associated with an increased risk of seizure disorders in children, except for those exposed at 11-16 gestational weeks. These children had a 3.15-fold increased risk of neonatal seizures (95% confidence interval: 1.37, 7.25) and a 1.81-fold increased risk of epilepsy (95% confidence interval: 1.13, 2.90). These findings suggest that maternal binge drinking during a specific time period of pregnancy may be associated with an increased risk of specific seizure disorders in the offspring. The results are exploratory, however, and need to be replicated.
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PMID:Binge drinking during pregnancy and risk of seizures in childhood: a study based on the Danish National Birth Cohort. 1906 45


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