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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (
seizures
)
80,221
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Five patients received overdoses of vincristine ranging from 3.5 to 32 mg. Neurotoxicity accounted for most of the complications observed. Peripheral neuropathies, cranial nerve palsies, paralytic ileus, atony of the bladder, hypertension, hypotension,
seizures
,
inappropriate ADH secretion
, and severe bone marrow depression were all encountered. Two patients died within 72 hours of the overdose. Another patient died of sepsis 22 days after the overdose. Two patients recovered and were discharged. The three patients who survived longer than a few days showed improvement in the vincristine-induced neuropathy, and the two long-term survivors had essentially complete recovery. It appears that if a patient can be supported through the critical period following an overdose, he can be expected to recover normal neurologic function.
...
PMID:Overdosage with vincristine. 18 48
Cerebral arterial infarction is a very rare condition during the neonatal period. In recent times, cerebral infarctions with an atypical bland course are reported in healthy, unsuspected newborns. For the first time, we saw focal
seizures
and a transient syndrome of
inappropriate ADH secretion
in a full-term, male newborn with an infarction of the middle cerebral artery as the first sign of this disorder. On the basis of these rare clinical manifestations, the literature about neonatal cerebral infarction is reviewed. The diagnostic possibilities and prognostic expectations are discussed. It is the aim of this case report to call attention to this rare disease in order to avoid a delay in diagnosis and therapy, even if the initial manifestations are atypical.
...
PMID:[Neonatal focal seizures and transitory inappropriate ADH secretion syndrome due to an infarction in the region of the middle cerebral artery]. 177 Sep 60
There are a number of clinical situations where overhydration may occur. If the reduction in plasma osmolality is acute, passive water influx swells brain cells, shrinking the extracellular space around them. It is during this time that susceptibility to generalized tonic-clonic seizure dramatically increases. Common clinical examples include hastened rehydration therapy, the dialysis disequilibrium syndrome, compulsive polydipsia, the syndrome of
inappropriate ADH secretion
(SIADH) and post-TURP syndrome. Treatments that tend to restore normal cellular volume (dehydration, mannitol infusion) help protect against this form of
seizure
. Support for a correlation between plasma osmolality and
seizure
susceptibility is scattered amongst the literature of several medical disciplines and spans almost 70 years. However a cellular basis to explain how overhydration might promote epileptiform activity has been examined only recently. The neocortical and hippocampal brain slice preparations permit an examination of how acute osmotic change alters cortical excitability independent of vascular damage, brain compression or other factors secondary to brain swelling. Electrophysiological evidence indicates that hyposmolality promotes epileptiform activity by strengthening both excitatory synaptic communication in neocortex and field effects among the entire cortical population. Moreover there is little evidence that associated hyponatremia in itself leads to increased CNS excitability. Such findings help in understanding how rapid lowering of plasma osmolality in clinical situations can promote the hyperexcitability associated with generalized tonic-clonic seizure.
...
PMID:Seizure and acute osmotic change: clinical and neurophysiological aspects. 202 29
This is a report on six psychiatric patients who indulged in excessive ingestion of water and subsequently developed tonic-clonic
seizures
in the course of the underlying mental disorders. On the basis of the DSM-III criteria, they were diagnosed as follows: schizophrenic disorder, 4; schizo-affective disorder, 1; borderline personality disorder, 1. The levels of serum electrolytes were estimated during five episodes of
seizures
in three patients. Hyponatremia was a consistent finding (serum sodium: mean = 120.6 mEq/liter). Plasma osmolality and plasma levels of arginine vasopressin (AVP) were determined during two episodes in two patients. The inappropriately high circulating levels of AVP relative to plasma hypoosmolality were documented. However, the response to the overnight fluid deprivation and acute water load during the period of no
seizures
in two patients revealed no evidence of the persistent
SIADH
, suggesting the temporal association of hyponatremic encephalopathy with inappropriate AVP secretion. It is not conclusive whether the transient
SIADH
is the cause or the consequence of hyponatremic encephalopathy, although a delusion or an auditory hallucination could play a critical role in drinking water excessively in three patients.
...
PMID:The syndrome of self-induced water intoxication in psychiatric patients. 406 56
The authors valued some metabolic parameters (sodium, potassium, calcium, blood levels of glucose, proteins, nitrogen, creatinine) in 159 children with febrile convulsions and compared the results with those of a group of children with fever (50 subjects) and of a group of health, fever free children (50 subjects). In the patients with febrile convulsions serum levels of sodium, calcium and osmolarity resulted significantly lower than those obtained in both control groups. The electrolytic modification (overall hyponatremia, probably due to a
SIADH
) may have a role in short-term relapses of febrile convulsions. Hyponatremia is present also in some children with high fever, without
seizures
; it may be that hyponatremia, in predisposed subjects, lower the threshold of neuromuscular excitability.
...
PMID:[Electrolytic changes in febrile convulsions]. 409 12
A patient with chronic bronchitis and acute respiratory failure due to mycoplasma pneumonia received excess parenteral fluid and developed hyponatremia associated with generalized
seizures
. The low serum osmolarity and elevated urine osmolarity were consistent with
SIADH
. Treatment with erythromycin and water restriction resulted in the complete recovery of her acute respiratory condition and return of the serum sodium and osmolarity values to normal.
...
PMID:Inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone and mycoplasma pneumonia infection. 703 12
Recent epidemiologic studies (11) have shown a frequency of 3-5% of hyponatremia in chronic psychiatric patients, characterized by headaches, blurry vision, weakness, cramps, vomiting and sometimes
seizures
or coma leading to death. The etiopathology of this electrolytic syndrome is still debated and intriguing. Six to 17% of hospitalized patients in psychiatry present primary polydipsia, among which 25-50% develop hyponatremia. Another cause is the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of anti-diuretic hormone,
SIADH
, which may be due to a number of psychotropic drugs as carbamazepine, thioridazine, amitriptyline, desipramine, haloperidol, chlorpromazine and fluoxetine (1, 2, 7, 9, 15, 18, 24). These medications can be associated with primary polydipsia but not necessarily, and the hyponatremia is reversible after discontinuiting the treatment. We describe a case of hyponatremia possibly related to clomipramine which has been rarely reported in the literature and discuss the relations between hyponatremia, psychosis, and
SIADH
.
...
PMID:[Hyponatremia of therapeutic origin. Apropos of a case]. 782 16
The syndrome of water intoxication, resulting from dilutional hyponatremia and characterized by lethalgy, confusion,
seizures
, and coma was seen in two autistic boys living in the institution for mentally retarded children. Patient 1, a 19 year-old autistic boy showed loss of attention, inactiveness, sleepiness and delirium and then followed by overbreathing, severe vomiting and finally convulsive
seizures
several times, or coma, since October 1985. In August 1988, he was admitted with generalized tonic clonic convulsion associated with frequent vomiting EEG showed diffuse spike and wave complex with slow background activity. Laboratory data showed inappropriately high serum ADH level (8.5 pg/ml), low sodium concentration (121 mOsm/m/l), serum osmolality (237 mOsm/l) which was lower than urine osmolality (334 mOsm/l), and remarkable body weight gain (8.5 kg). He was diagnosed as water intoxication due to compulsive water drinking and
SIADH
. Diminished GH secretion to insulin-induced hypoglycemia and exaggerated prolactin response to LHRH stimulation suggested a hypothalamic lesion. Patient 2, a 17-year-old autistic boy, showed essentially the same symptoms and laboratory data as Patient 1, except that he had no epileptic discharge in EEG, and curious GH response to insulin-induced hypoglycemia. A remarkable daily body weight change suggested excessive water drinking and a possible episodic release of ADH. With mild water restriction, this became smaller. Since Patient 1 had epileptic attacks several times without hyponatremia and his EEG showed epileptic discharges, he was diagnosed as having epilepsy. Patient 2 has been
seizure
-free until now. Abnormality of hypothalamic or pituitary defects and polydipsia and possibility of water intoxication should always be considered when an autistic patients shows recurrent epileptic attacks or episodic strange behaviors with hyponatremia.
...
PMID:[Two cases of infantile autism with intermittent water intoxication due to compulsive water drinking and episodic release of antidiuretic hormone (SIADH)]. 929 11
We report two cases with complex partial and secondarily generalized
seizures
, both on oxcarbazepine and vigabatrin, with additional lamotrigine in one case. Both died in a manner resembling SUDEP, i.e. suddenly, unexpectedly, probably following a
seizure
with pulmonary oedema at autopsy. Both had
SIADH
. A number of drugs may cause
SIADH
, among them carbamazepine and oxcarbazepine. A search for
SIADH
in patients on carbamazepine and oxcarbazepine, and in cases of sudden death in epilepsy, is recommended.
Seizure
1998 Oct
PMID:Sudden death in two patients with epilepsy and the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion (SIADH). 980 22
We studied
seizures
that occur during the acute phase of aseptic and bacterial meningitis in childhood. Of the 108 children with aseptic meningitis, five had
seizures
(4.7%). Four patients developed them within 24 hours of the onset of the initial symptom (fever in 3 cases), and three had repeated
seizures
on the first day. One case had
SIADH
complication, but another neurologic abnormalities were not observed. On the 18 children with bacterial meningitis, three cases (16.7%) had
seizure
, which occurred on the second day of illness. Disturbance of consciousness and cerebral hypertension were observed in 2 cases each, and abnormal cerebral CT findings in all the three. The NSE level in the cerebrospinal fluid was elevated in 2 cases. Thus,
seizures
occurring in the acute phase of aseptic meningitis may reflect transient cerebral functional abnormality accompanying fever or
SIADH
, whereas those in bacterial meningitis may result from neural tissue damage due to encephalopathy or angitis. In aseptic and bacterial meningitis, the presence of
seizures
in the acute phase was not correlated with the neurological outcome.
...
PMID:[Seizures in the acute phase of aseptic and bacterial meningitis]. 984 13
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