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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (
seizures
)
80,221
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Sudden cerebrovascular insults occurred during or immediately following remission induction therapy in 4 children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. In 3, cerebral infarction was due to thrombosis. In the fourth, an intracerebral hematoma developed representing either frank hemorrhaging or a hemorrhagic infarction. None of the patients had central nervous system
leukemia
or extreme leukocytosis at the time of diagnosis. Symptoms were obtundation, hemiparesis,
seizures
, and headache. The induction chemotherapy included L-asparaginase which causes deficiencies of antithrombin, plasminogen, fibrinogen, and factors IX and XI. These hemostatic abnormalities may explain the thromboses and bleeding observed in these children.
...
PMID:Thrombotic and hemorrhagic strokes complicating early therapy for childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 693 53
A longitudinal study of 49 children with acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) assessed the long-term effects of central nervous system (CNS) prophylaxis on brain function. From 10 to 12 electroencephalograms (EEGs) were done before and at intervals during after 30 months of treatment that included 2,400 rads of CNS irradiation plus intrathecal methotrexate therapy. None of the children had CNS
leukemia
, and all remained in first complete remissions. All 49 had abnormally slow EEG background frequencies during the four-year study, and 29 (60%) developed somnolence syndrome six to eight weeks after CNS prophylaxis. During this syndrome, EEG background frequencies decreased more than 3 standard deviations below the expected mean values for normal children. Thereafter, 7 of the 29 began to show signs of learning disabilities and 7 developed recurrent
seizures
. Of the 20 children who did not have the syndrome, none showed later evidence of CNS dysfunction. Somnolence may be an early indicator of long-term neurological sequelae after cranial irradiation.
...
PMID:Long-term neurological implications of somnolence syndrome in children with acute lymphocytic leukemia. 693 83
From 1972-1974, 228 children began treatment for acute lymphocytic leukemia and were prospectively assessed for neurologic complications. After CNS irradiation (2,400 rad) and intrathecal methotrexate (MTX), they received weekly intravenous maintenance therapy with MTX alone (40-60 mg/m2; 20 patients) or MTX (10-30 mg/m2) with other drugs (208 patients). Signs of leukoencephalopathy appeared in 11 children (nine without CNS
leukemia
) after 4-15 months of IV MTX alone, and included lethargy,
seizures
, spasticity, paresis, drooling, and dementia. Before or during the clinical onset, EEG frequencies slowed (all ten patients tested). Radionuclide scans showed periventricular accumulation of 99mTc (9/11 patients) and remained abnormal for greater than or equal to six months in eight patients. Cranial computed tomograms or neuropathology findings (five patients each) demonstrated leukoencephalopathy (nine patients) and radiation-related microangiopathy (ten patients). Severe neurologic and neuropsychologic dysfunctions were present in four long-term survivors.
...
PMID:Progression of methotrexate-induced leukoencephalopathy in children with leukemia. 693 56
Methotrexate, a mainstay treatment for children with acute lymphoblastic
leukaemia
, can cause neurotoxicity, with paralysis,
seizures
, somnolence, anorexia, and headaches. The pathophysiology of this reaction is unknown. It has been suggested that the anti-inflammatory effect of methotrexate in patients with arthritis is due to adenosine release brought on by inhibition of purine synthesis. Since adenosine is a central nervous system depressant, we wondered whether adenosine release in the central nervous system could account for some of the neurotoxicity due to methotrexate, and whether that toxicity could be lessened by displacement of adenosine from its receptor by aminophylline. 6 patients (age 3-16 years) who had methotrexate-induced neurotoxicity unresponsive to standard treatment received 2.5 mg/kg aminophylline. In addition, the concentration of adenosine in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) from 11 children completing a 24-h systemic methotrexate protocol was compared with that in 8 newly diagnosed patients and 12 who had not received any treatment for at least a week. 4 of 6 patients with toxic signs and symptoms attributed to methotrexate and unrelieved by steroids, epidural blood patch, promethazine, 5-hydroytryptamine antagonists, paracetamol, and narcotics, had complete resolution of neurotoxicity after or during a 1-h infusion of aminophylline; 2 others had a pronounced improvement but persistent nausea. CSF adenosine concentrations of patients receiving methotrexate, even when there was very slight or no toxicity, were greatly increased compared with control subjects (mean values of 217 and 51 nmol/L, median 175 and 52 nmol/L). Subacute methotrexate neurotoxicity may be mediated by adenosine and relieved by aminophylline.
...
PMID:Aminophylline for methotrexate-induced neurotoxicity. 777 73
Two patients presented with fever and nodular pulmonary infiltrates 9 and 6 months after marrow transplantation for
leukemia
. The second patient also had painful subcutaneous nodules that subsequently ulcerated. Both had a history of sinusitis and both had recently been treated with corticosteroids. During treatment with antibacterial and antifungal antibiotics, they developed rapid mental deterioration, coma and/or
seizures
. CT findings included hydrocephalus with extensive cortical and periventricular hypodensities in the first patient, and hydrocephalus with a cerebellar hemorrhage and edema in the second patient. Cerebrospinal fluid had a low glucose and elevated protein levels with few erythrocytes and little or no pleocytosis. Despite therapy with broad-spectrum antibiotics, including coverage for opportunistic infections, both patients died. Autopsy revealed Acanthamoeba species causing necrotizing meningoencephalitis, pneumonitis and adrenalitis in the first patient and causing necrotizing meningoencephalitis and dermatitis in the second patient. While these are the only reported cases of disseminated Acanthamoeba infection in marrow transplant recipients, a review of the literature suggests that this organism may be a new cause of opportunistic infections.
...
PMID:Acanthamoeba meningoencephalitis after bone marrow transplantation. 799 73
In a population based register of stroke (n = 536) compiled in Perth, Western Australia during an 18 month period in 1989-90, 60 cases (11%) of primary intracerebral haemorrhage were identified among 56 persons (52% men). The mean age of these patients was 68 (range 23-93) and 46 (77%) events were first ever strokes. The crude annual incidence was 35 per 100,000, with a peak in the eighth decade, and a male predominance. Deep and lobar haemorrhages each accounted for almost one third of all cases. The clinical presentations included sudden coma (12%), headache (8%),
seizures
(8%), and pure sensory-motor stroke (3%). Primary intracerebral haemorrhage was the first presentation of
leukaemia
in two cases (both fatal) and it followed an alcoholic binge in four cases. 55% had a history of hypertension. 16 (27%) patients, half of whom had a history of hypertension, were taking antiplatelet agents, and one patient was taking warfarin. There were only two confirmed cases of amyloid angiopathy. The overall 28 day case fatality was 35%, but this varied from 100% for haemorrhages in the brainstem to 22% for those in the basal ganglionic or thalamic region. Other predictors of early death were intraventricular extension of blood, volume of haematoma, mass effect, and coma and severe paresis at onset. Although based on small numbers, these data confirm the heterogeneous nature of primary intracerebral haemorrhage, but they also suggest a different clinical spectrum of this type of stroke in the community compared with the experience of specialist neurological units.
...
PMID:Spectrum of primary intracerebral haemorrhage in Perth, Western Australia, 1989-90: incidence and outcome. 805 17
A 19-year-old man with acute lymphoblastic
leukaemia
developed fever, general deterioration and somnolence 3 days after a cycle of cytostatic treatment. He had anaemia (haemoglobin 6.6 g/dl), leukopenia (100/microliters) and thrombocytopenia (7,000/microliters). As an acute septicaemia was suspected he received broad spectrum antibiotic therapy, together with two units of red cell and platelet concentrates. However, his condition worsened rapidly over the next 5 hours (meningism,
seizures
, fever to 41.1 degrees C, dyspnoea). Another blood count revealed severe haemolysis. Computed tomography of the skull demonstrated multilocular intraparenchymal gas formation. Although the antibiotic treatment was extended the patient died several hours later. Retrospective examination for suspected transfusion mismatch provided no evidence for erythrocyte incompatibility. But there was liberation of T-antigen as sign of a bacterial cause of erythrocyte damage. An anaerobic blood culture grew Clostridium perfringens. This case demonstrates that acute intravascular haemolysis in septicaemia should be considered in the differential diagnosis of transfusion mismatch.
...
PMID:[Acute intravasal hemolysis in Clostridium perfringens sepsis. Differential diagnosis of hemolytic episodes]. 813 16
Between October 1988 and December 1992, 167 patients with
leukemia
receiving marrow transplants from HLA-identical donors and conditioned with cyclophosphamide (120 mg/kg) were randomized to additional treatment with either busulfan (16 mg/kg, n = 88) or total body irradiation (TBI; n = 79). The busulfan-treated patients had an increased cumulative incidence of veno-occlusive disease of the liver, ie, 12% compared with 1% in the TBI group (P = .009). Furthermore, hemorrhagic cystitis occurred in 24% of the busulfan patients versus 8% in the TBI patients (P = .003). In patients with advanced disease beyond first remission or first chronic phase, transplantation-related mortality was 62% among the busulfan-treated patients compared with 12% among the TBI recipients (P = .002). These differences between the two groups were statistically significant in multivariate analysis.
Seizures
were seen in 6% of the busulfan-treated patients and were absent in the TBI group (P = .03). Grade II-IV of acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) was similar in the two groups, but grade III-IV and chronic disease was more common in the busulfan-treated group (P = .04). Death associated with GVHD occurred in 17% of the busulfan-treated group and 2% of the TBI group (P = .003). Patients treated with busulfan had a 3-year actuarial survival of 62%, which was worse than the 76% among those treated with TBI (P < .03). In multivariate analysis, poor survival was associated with advanced disease (P < .0001), no posttransplant septicemia (P = .0006), grade II-IV GVHD (P = .006), and busulfan treatment (P < .02). The incidence of relapse did not differ between the two groups. Relapse-free survival was also similar in the two treatment groups on analysis of data from all patients, children, patients with early disease, and those with acute myeloid leukemia, acute lymphoblastic leukemia, and chronic myeloid leukemia. However, in adults (P = .05) and patients with advanced disease (P = .005),
leukemia
-free survival was significantly better in those treated with TBI. We conclude that patients treated with busulfan have more early toxicity and an increased transplant-related mortality in patients with advanced disease. TBI is therefore the treatment of choice, especially in adults and patients with advanced disease. However, busulfan is an acceptable alternative for patients with early disease and for those in whom TBI is not feasible.
...
PMID:A randomized trial comparing busulfan with total body irradiation as conditioning in allogeneic marrow transplant recipients with leukemia: a report from the Nordic Bone Marrow Transplantation Group. 816 51
The occurrence of cancer and neurological disorders in first- and second-degree relatives of children in the United States and Canada diagnosed with brain tumor before age six was investigated. A pair-matched case-control study with 155 astrocytoma and 166 primitive neuroectodermal tumor (PNET) cases was performed. Cases were identified through the Childrens Cancer Group. Controls were selected by random-digit dialing and matched to cases on age, race, and telephone area code and exchange. Childhood cancers were more common in PNET relatives compared with the general population (standardized incidence ratio [SIR] = 2.5, 95 percent confidence interval [CI] 1.1-4.8, P = 0.02) and with control relatives (odds ratio [OR] = 3.0, CI = 0.5-30, P = 0.29). For astrocytoma, nonsignificant excesses of brain tumor,
leukemia
/lymphoma, and childhood cancer occurred among case relatives compared with control relatives, but not compared with the general population. Astrocytoma cases were significantly more likely than controls to have a relative with
seizures
(OR = 2.5, CI = 1.2-4.9, P = 0.009), especially childhood
seizures
(OR = 3.4, CI = 1.2-12, P = 0.02), epilepsy (OR = 3.0, CI = 0.9-13, P = 0.08), and febrile convulsions (OR = 4.5, CI = 0.9-43, P = 0.07). A family history of stroke was not a risk factor for either type of brain tumor. These results suggest that some childhood brain tumors may result from a genetic susceptibility and that some risk factors may affect childhood astrocytoma and PNET differently.
...
PMID:Family history of cancer and seizures in young children with brain tumors: a report from the Childrens Cancer Group (United States and Canada). 821 78
As survival rates for childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia have increased, concerns over improved quality-of-life have also increased. Although 3-10% of children may experience acute transient neurotoxicity during induction chemotherapy, they are felt to be at low risk for late sequelae. We report three previously healthy boys with newly-diagnosed acute lymphoblastic leukemia who presented with obtundation and severe
seizures
during late induction with a standard four drug chemotherapy regimen. While all three are disease-free survivors, they unexpectedly have persistent and medically intractable partial complex
seizures
, broad-based neuropsychological impairment and striking neuroimaging abnormalities. These findings suggest that children with
leukemia
who develop an acute encephalopathy during induction chemotherapy are at risk for long-term neurological and neuropsychological sequelae, despite the cessation of further potentially neurotoxic therapy.
...
PMID:Severe permanent encephalopathy in acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 822 83
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