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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (
seizures
)
80,221
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
"Eyelid myoclonia with and without absences" has been incorporated into the new ILAE diagnostic scheme as a type of epileptic seizure with etiologic, therapeutic, and prognostic implications. Eyelid myoclonia with absences (EMA) is characterized by eyelid myoclonia and absences provoked mainly by eye closure and photosensivity. EMA can be a part of idiopathic, symptomatic, or probably symptomatic epileptic syndromes. EMA is the defining
seizure
symptom that differentiates the idiopathic reflex epileptic syndrome Jeavons syndrome from eyelid myoclonia with absences. Jeavons syndrome is characterized by unique clinical and electroencephalographic features and often genetic clustering. EMA is easily diagnosed by clinical manifestations and properly conducted electroencephalography. However, it is often misdiagnosed as tics or other types of epileptic
seizures
and syndromes, particularly in patients with mental retardation, behavioral disturbances, and atypical electroencephalographic findings. We describe a 19-year-old woman with EMA who remained undiagnosed for many years. She was
mildly mentally retarded
and her electroencephalogram showed slow background activity, which are unusual findings in Jeavons syndrome.
...
PMID:Unusual features in eyelid myoclonia with absences: a patient with mild mental retardation and background slowing on electroencephalography. 1644 19
Benign partial epilepsy in infancy (BPEI) is an infantile epilepsy with excellent
seizure
and developmental outcome proposed by Watanabe et al. Our telephone interview survey revealed that the long-term outcome of patients with BPEI was also excellent over 8 years of age. Six of 39 patients did not fulfill the criteria of BPEI by the last follow-up. Two patients had a recurrence of unprovoked
seizure
beyond 2 years of age, three had cognitive problems (
mild mental retardation
in two and Asperger syndrome in one) and the other had both a recurrence of
seizure
and
mild mental retardation
. These results indicates that a large majority of patients diagnosed as possible BPEI at 2 years of age did not have a recurrence of unprovoked
seizures
and mental problems beyond 8 years of age. Our study also suggested a presence of some marginal syndromes of BPEI. An association of paroxysmal kinesigenic choreoathetosis was observed in three patients. Another three patients had experienced
seizures
with mild gastroenteritis. The
seizure
outcome of three patients with mild cognitive problems was quite excellent. These patients can be grouped as a marginal syndrome of BPEI.
...
PMID:Benign partial epilepsy in infancy long-term outcome and marginal syndromes. 1683 66
This report describes a female with eyelid fluttering with absence
seizures
, infrequent generalized tonic-clonic
seizures
, and
mild mental retardation
. Interictal and video-electroencephalography evaluations revealed normal activity while eyes were open but continuous generalized discharges with eyes closed (eyes closed induced abnormality), as well as fixation-off sensitivity. This patient is in the group of a pure and distinct clinical form of fixation-off sensitivity cryptogenic generalized epilepsy.
...
PMID:Fixation-off sensitivity and generalized epileptic EEG induced by eyes closed. 1707 10
Early onset of absence
seizures
(<3 years) is rare and usually associated with a poor cognitive prognosis. Familial cases have not been reported to date. We observed a family in which two out of three sibs showed early-onset absences and
mild mental retardation
. Linkage to the ECA1 locus, where one clinical subtype of CAE is mapped, was excluded by haplotype analysis. Direct sequencing of the candidate genes CLCN2 ,GABRG2 and CHRNA4 showed no mutations. We suggest the possibility of a specific epileptic syndrome with a putative AR inheritance. Further report of affected patients might allow a better classification.
...
PMID:Familial occurrence of early-onset childhood absence epilepsy. 1726 50
Data on epilepsy in pervasive developmental disorder not otherwise specified are few and scanty. Seventy-seven patients with pervasive developmental disorder not otherwise specified were compared with 77 with autistic disorder, matched for age and sex. The 2 groups were divided into 3 subgroups each: A, without electroencephalography (EEG) paroxysmal abnormalities or epilepsy; B, with EEG paroxysmal abnormalities without epilepsy; and C, with epilepsy.
Mild mental retardation
(P < .01), pathological neurological examination (P < .05), cerebral lesions (P < .01), abnormal EEG background activity (P < .001), and associated genetic pathologies (P < .01) were more common in pervasive developmental disorder not otherwise specified. Familial antecedents for epilepsy prevailed in subgroup C (P < .01). Epilepsy occurred in 35.1% of patients with pervasive developmental disorder not otherwise specified, with no statistically significant difference compared with autistic disorder. The mean age of
seizure
onset was earlier (2 years 8 months) in pervasive developmental disorder not otherwise specified (P < .000).
Seizure
outcome was better in autistic disorder. Genetic diseases and cerebral lesions should be investigated in pervasive developmental disorder not otherwise specified to clarify the etiological and clinical features.
...
PMID:Epilepsy in patients with pervasive developmental disorder not otherwise specified. 1794 Feb 46
Aicardi syndrome has been defined by the triad of agenesis of the corpus callosum, early
seizure
onset and lacunar chorioretinopathy. In a nation-wide survey a total of 18 Swedish cases were found. Fourteen girls were re-examined by one of the authors at the ages of 1-27 years. One was
seizure
free following epilepsy surgery operation, 13 were drug resistant. Two were on ketogenic diet. Most of the girls had multifocal EEG discharges. All except one were severely disabled with severe mental retardation and total dependency on helpers for activities of daily life. Communication, nutrition, and motor function were severely affected areas. Visual function was difficult to evaluate because of mental retardation and lack of co-operation and varied from severely impaired to normal. In one case the appearance of the ocular fundus was documented to have changed with time. One girl was exceptional and
seizure
free with
mild mental retardation
. An update by March 2006 showed that 12/18 patients were still alive, at a median age of 13.5 years (range: 3-31 years). Six had died between the ages of 3-10 years. They had all suffered from intractable epilepsy and belonged to the most disabled group. Surprisingly two had died from malignant brain tumours.
...
PMID:Aicardi syndrome: follow-up investigation of Swedish children born in 1975-2002. 1805 26
The association of brain malformations and symptomatic epilepsy in the setting of neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) is rarely reported. When it occurs, patients can present clinically with infantile spasms, focal
seizures
, generalized tonic clonic
seizures
or atypical absences. We report on a 10-year-old (molecularly proven) NF1 girl manifesting a complex epileptic syndrome resembling the Foix-Chavany-Marie spectrum (also known as opercular syndrome) associated with bilateral (opercular and paracentral lobular) polymicrogyria (PMG). Anecdotal cases of unilateral PMG in the setting of NF1 have been described in association with other-than-opercular epileptic syndromes. The typical clinical opercular syndrome consisting in
mild mental retardation
, epilepsy and pseudobulbar palsy is usually associated to bilateral perisylvian PMG (BPP) CONCLUSION: To the best of our knowledge, the complex epileptic syndrome hereby reported has not been previously recorded in the setting of NF1. In addition, the present girl manifested all the clinical features of an opercular syndrome but had an asymmetrical PMG (not a BPP).
...
PMID:Complex epileptic (Foix-Chavany-Marie like) syndrome in a child with neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) and bilateral (opercular and paracentral) polymicrogyria. 1914 Nov 42
Neuronal migration disorders are an heterogeneous group of disorders of nervous system development and they are considered to be one of the most significant causes of neurological and developmental disabilities and epileptic
seizures
in childhood. In the last ten years, molecular biologic and genetic investigations have widely increased our knowledge about the regulation of neuronal migration during development. One of the most frequent disorders is lissencephaly. It is characterized by a paucity of normal gyri and sulci resulting in a "smooth brain". There are two pathologic subtypes: classical and cobblestone. Classical lissencephaly is caused by an arrest of neuronal migration whereas cobblestone lissencephaly caused by overmigration. Heterotopia is another important neuronal migration disorder. It is characterized by a cluster of disorganized neurons in abnormal locations and it is divided into three main groups: periventricular nodular heterotopia, subcortical heterotopia and marginal glioneural heterotopia. Polymicrogyria develops at the final stages of neuronal migration, in the earliest phases of cortical organization; bilateral frontoparietal form is characterized by bilateral, symmetric polymicrogyria in the frontoparietal regions. Bilateral perisylvian polymicrogyria causes a clinical syndrome which manifests itself in the form of
mild mental retardation
, epilepsy and pseudobulbar palsy. Schizencephaly is another important neuronal migration disorder whose clinical characteristics are extremely variable. This review reports the main clinical and pathophysiological aspects of these disorders paying particular attention to the recent advances in molecular genetics.
...
PMID:New trends in neuronal migration disorders. 1926 20
A 10-year-old boy presented with a severe and diffuse mosaic skin hypopigmentation running (in narrow bands) along the lines of Blaschko associated with mosaic areas of alopecia, facial dysmorphism with midface hypoplasia, bilateral punctate cataract, microretrognathia, short neck, pectus excavatum, joint hypermobility, mild muscular hypotonia, generalized
seizures
, and
mild mental retardation
. Cranial magnetic resonance imaging revealed hypoplastic corpus callosum (primarily posterior), subcortical band heterotopia, and diffuse subcortical, periventricular cystic-like lesions. Similar dysmorphic features were observed in the child's mother, but with no imaging abnormalities. The facial phenotype coupled with the cysts in the brain was strongly reminiscent of the oculocerebrorenal Lowe syndrome. Full chromosome studies in the parents and the proband and mutation analysis on peripheral blood lymphocytes (and on skin cultured fibroblasts from affected and unaffected skin areas in the child) in the genes for subcortical band heterotopia (DCX (Xq22.3-q23)], lissencephaly (PAFAH1B1, alias LIS1, at 17p13.3), and oculocerebrorenal syndrome of Lowe (OCRL at Xq23-q24)] were unrevealing. This constellation of multiple congenital anomalies including skin hypopigmentation and eye, musculoskeletal, and nervous system abnormalities was sufficiently characterized to be regarded as a novel example of pigmentary mosaicism of the Ito type (i.e., hypomelanosis of Ito).
...
PMID:Pigmentary mosaicism, subcortical band heterotopia, and brain cystic lesions. 1938 77
We report four infants (two males, two females) with ring 14 chromosome presenting with early-onset partial epilepsy. The first
seizure
occurred between 3 and 6 months (3, 3, 4, and 6mo respectively). In all four cases, diagnosis was based on early focal
seizures
, rather than on psychomotor retardation or morphological features, which were not prominent at
seizure
onset. Moreover, despite the young age of the patients and the high frequency of
seizures
, neither epileptic spasms nor progression to 'epileptic encephalopathy', such as hypsarrhythmia, were observed. Epilepsy remained partial in these patients. At the most recent follow-up, all four children had slight or mild psychomotor delay, and two of them had moderate non-specific dysmorphic traits. Data from the literature about epilepsy in ring 14 chromosome syndrome were also reviewed. Ring 14 chromosome syndrome may be revealed by isolated, early-onset focal epilepsy suggestive of focal lesions with only
mild mental retardation
and morphological features at the time of diagnosis. The characteristics of these observations differ from classic ring 14 syndrome, and may enlarge this clinical spectrum. Many unanswered questions remain concerning phenotype-genotype correlation and identification of the potential genes and molecular mechanisms responsible for epilepsy in patients with ring 14 syndrome.
...
PMID:Ring 14 chromosome presenting as early-onset isolated partial epilepsy. 1941 18
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