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

The diagnosis of brain tumour could not be made in 91 cases at the first investigation in a group of 1155 brain tumours. Slowly growing gliomas causing only epileptic fits and no other symptoms are especially difficult to diagnose. Of 21 personal observations of tumour seizures, in which the diagnosis of the neoplasm was missed at the first investigation in hospital, 9 were oligodendrogliomas, 5 astrocytomas, 3 glioblastomas, 2 spongioblastomas, 1 gangliocytoma and 1 a metastasis. They were all located in the frontal or centroparietal region. In most cases the seizures appeared during the third or fourth decade. The average interval between the first epileptic fit and the tumour diagnosis was 8.2 years in cases of oligodendrogliomas and 2.2 years in astrocytomas. 5 patients had major seizures, 2 had psychomotor attacks and all the others suffered from partial epilepsy. Anticonvulsive therapy was often successfull; either the frequency of the fits diminished or, in 2 cases, the character of the seizures changed. 18 patients had a normal neurostatus at time of the first investigation. Only 3 patients had a slight difference of physiological reflexes, but no other pathological signs. In none of the patients did investigation of the CSF, skull X-rays, brain scanning, pneumencephalography or cerebral angiography first lead to the diagnosis of a brain tumour. The EEG alone showed focal signs corresponding to the location of the tumour in about 50% of the cases.
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PMID:[The problem of early diagnosis of brain tumours causing seizures only (author's transl)]. 5 Oct 77

Two unrelated patients with macrocephaly, seizures, and mild cerebellar signs had a dysplastic gangliocytoma of the cerebellum (Lhermitte-Duclos disease). Both also had autosomal dominant Cowden disease as evidenced by facial, oral, and acral papules. In the two families, 9 sibs demonstrated the mucocutaneous lesions, thyroid disease, breast tumors, and ovarian tumors compatible with the diagnosis of Cowden disease. Some of the sibs also showed various degrees of neurological signs such as macrocephaly, mental retardation, seizures, tremor, and dysdiadochokinesia. Magnetic resonance imaging scans of sibs of one family demonstrated megalencephaly and other mild abnormalities. The occurrence of these two rare disorders in single patients is more than a coincidence, and the clinical findings in the combined condition establishes it as a new phakomatosis.
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PMID:Lhermitte-Duclos disease and Cowden disease: a single phakomatosis. 164 66

From January 1983 to April 1988, 40 cases of epilepsy were treated surgically. There were 15 cases of posttraumatic cicatrix, 5 cases of grade I astrocytoma, 9 cases of diffuse gliosis, 4 cases of vascular malformation, 1 case of calcification and cicatrix of temporal lobe, 2 cases of microglia malformation, 1 case of brain atrophy complicating ganglioneuroma, 2 cases of localized brain atrophy, 1 case of post-hematoma cicatrix. The end results were seizures subsided in 26, and reduction of the seriousness in 8. No mortality in this series. Follow-up study showed 85% of these patients with effectiveness. The indication of surgery, utilizing of electrocorticography, excision of epileptogenic focus are discussed.
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PMID:[Surgical treatment of epilepsy with electrocorticography monitoring]. 251 53

We describe the clinical, radiologic, and EEG features of 3 children who had dysplastic gangliocytomas of the cerebral hemispheres and drug resistant partial seizures that began in infancy. Following cortical resection, 2 are seizure-free and the third almost seizure-free. The dysplastic gangliocytoma may be an important and surgically remediable cause of very early malignant partial seizures.
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PMID:Dysplastic gangliocytoma and intractable partial seizures in childhood. 292 89

Epilepsy surgery has been demonstrated to be an effective alternative treatment for intractable partial or localization related epilepsy. Primary intracranial neoplasms and other structural lesions of the brain are important etiological factors in patients with partial seizure disorders. A neuroimaging identified lesion in patients with seizures, not necessarily medically refractory, may also be an indication for surgery in selected patients. Twelve patients operated on under local or general anesthesia for resection surgery underwent intraoperative recording(electrocorticogram) and/or functional mapping by electrical stimulation or somatosensory evoked potentials-(SSEPs) for identification of the secondary epileptogenic area and/or functional area; 2 meningiomas, 5 astrocytomas, 1 gangliocytoma, 1 abscess, 1 small AVM, 1 cysticercosis and one gliosis by previous intracerebral hemorrhage with middle cerebral artery(MCA) aneurysm. Among these, additional corticectomy or anterior temporal lobectomy was performed in eleven patients. All the patients did well after surgery with good outcomes as seizure free in nine(75%) out of 12 patients with 11.9 months of follow-up period, without any neurological deficits. Intraoperative recording and functional mapping of adjacent areas of the structural lesions of the brain are useful in surgery and can guide the extent of further resection.
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PMID:Surgery for seizure-related structural lesions of the brain with intraoperative acute recording(ECoG) and functional mapping. 770 90

This is a retrospective study of 21 surgically treated patients with temporal lobe tumors and epilepsy. Evaluation included clinical data, EEG findings, structural scans, pathological diagnosis and post-surgical follow-up. There were 9 cases of ganglioglioma, 5 pilocytic astrocytoma, 3 ganglioneuroma, 2 dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumor, 1 pleomorphic xantoastrocytoma, and 1 meningioangiomatosis. Mean follow-up time was 22 months and outcome was evaluated according to Engel's classification; 76.2% were classified in class I and 23.8% in II and III. All patients classes II and III had been submitted to mesial and neocortical resections. There were no differences related to clinical characteristics, pathological diagnosis or duration of follow-up in patients seizure-free or not. All patients had abnormal MRI and ten of these had normal CT; the MRI characteristics were compared to pathological diagnosis and specific histological characteristics of the tumors were not discernible by MRI. We concluded that MRI was essential for the diagnosis and precise location of TL tumors. Ganglioglioma was the most frequent tumor and lesionectomy associated to mesial resection doesn't guarantee a better prognosis.
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PMID:Clinical characteristics and surgical outcome of patients with temporal lobe tumors and epilepsy. 1110 64

Nerve cell tumours of the cerebrum tend to display a high degree of morphological variability from case to case, and this leads to poor understanding of these tumours. We retrospectively reviewed the clinical and patho-anatomic features of 16 primary nerve cell tumours of the cerebrum (M:9; F:7; average age at onset: 10.2 years). Intraventricular tumours were not included. In 13 patients epileptic seizures were the only symptoms, while three had headache or hemiparesis. Seven tumours were located in the frontal lobe, four in the parietal lobe, two in the temporal lobe and one each in the fronto-parietal lobes, occipital lobe and the midbrain. Tumours were histologically classified into three groups. In the first group, six tumours had the morphological features of classic gangliocytoma or ganglioglioma. In the second group six cerebral and midbrain tumours were composed of small cells, which showed apparent neuronal differentiation including positive immunoreactivity for synaptophysin and the presence of synaptic structures. These tumours usually involved both the cortex and white matter. In the third group, three tumours were composed of small nerve cells and ganglioid cells. All tumours were relatively well circumscribed, and thus eight tumours were totally removed, five subtotally and three partially. Following surgery, three patients, except one, are alive with stable imaging findings for 4 months - 19.3 years (average 11.6 years) after treatment. While small nerve cell tumours are found throughout the cerebrum and its identification broadens the spectrum of neuronal and mixed neuro-glial tumours, most of these tumours are biologically indolent.
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PMID:Nerve cell tumours of the cerebrum: variable clinical and pathological manifestations. 1138 95

Glial neoplasms that are peripherally located and involve the cortical gray matter are noteworthy because of their predilection to serve as a seizure locus, their amenability to surgical resection, their generally favorable prognosis, and their characteristic imaging features, which facilitate diagnosis before surgery. The smaller lesions include ganglioglioma and dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumor. Gangliogliomas contain both neuronal and glial components and occur most commonly in the temporal lobe. Variant forms of gangliogliomas may occur and are related to the different compositions of the underlying cellular population. Gangliocytomas lack glial cells and are located both in the cerebral hemispheres and the cerebellum. Lhermitte-Duclos disease represents a specific type of cerebellar gangliocytoma with dysplastic features and is characterized by a laminar pattern at imaging. Dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumors occur predominantly in children and young adults with partial seizures and most commonly arise in the temporal lobe, frequently in combination with cortical dysplasia. Surrounding vasogenic edema is conspicuously absent in both gangliogliomas and dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumors. The larger masses in this group include desmoplastic infantile ganglioglioma and pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma and tend to involve the leptomeninges and cortical territory. Both invoke an intense desmoplastic reaction, which appears as an enhancing soft-tissue component at imaging.
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PMID:From the archives of the AFIP: superficial gliomas: radiologic-pathologic correlation. Armed Forces Institute of Pathology. 1170 24

Somatic inactivation of PTEN occurs in different human tumors including glioblastoma, endometrial carcinoma and prostate carcinoma. Germline mutations in PTEN result in a range of phenotypic abnormalities that occur with variable penetrance, including neurological features such as macrocephaly, seizures, ataxia and Lhermitte-Duclos disease (also described as dysplastic gangliocytoma of the cerebellum). Homozygous deletion of Pten causes embryonic lethality in mice. To investigate function in the brain, we used Cre-loxP technology to selectively inactivate Pten in specific mouse neuronal populations. Loss of Pten resulted in progressive macrocephaly and seizures. Neurons lacking Pten expressed high levels of phosphorylated Akt and showed a progressive increase in soma size without evidence of abnormal proliferation. Cerebellar abnormalities closely resembled the histopathology of human Lhermitte-Duclos disease. These results indicate that Pten regulates neuronal size in vivo in a cell-autonomous manner and provide new insights into the etiology of Lhermitte-Duclos disease.
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PMID:Pten regulates neuronal soma size: a mouse model of Lhermitte-Duclos disease. 1172 27

Electrocortical stimulation mapping (ESM) is the clinical standard for localizing critical sensorimotor and language functions, but other functions can be assessed with this technique as well. The authors describe an 8-year-old girl with a left frontal desmoplastic gangliocytoma and medically intractable epilepsy who underwent a chronic invasive recording using electrode grids. Prior to electrode implantation, functional magnetic resonance (fMR) imaging was performed using a research protocol that included a working memory task. The ESM procedure interfered with working memory at a dorsolateral prefrontal site as predicted by fMR imaging, but because this site was part of the epileptogenic region, it was included in the resection. Since the operation the patient has been seizure free and her overall cognitive performance has improved. Yet she shows a selective impairment in working memory tasks that has persisted for over two years, indicating that the area identified using fMR imaging and ESM was critically involved in working memory. Her performance did improve, however, suggesting that compensatory mechanisms took place. This case reveals an important and perhaps critical function of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. Work continues to assess the specific cognitive functions subserved by the region identified with fMR imaging and ESM.
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PMID:Working memory deficits after resection of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex predicted by functional magnetic resonance imaging and electrocortical stimulation mapping. Case report. 1756 10


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