Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (seizures)
80,221 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Startle-induced epilepsy was observed in a 5-year-old boy with epidermal nevus syndrome. He manifested linear nevus on the face and neck, mild mental retardation, and right hemiparesis. Massive myoclonus, followed by tonic seizures, had been triggered by unexpected auditory stimuli since 3 years of age. The startle-induced seizures were the only epileptic manifestation. Interictal EEG occasionally depicted spontaneous focal spikes and waves in the left frontotemporal area, and ictal EEG depicted vertex spikes and then diffuse slow spike-and-wave complex bursts. Left frontal and perisylvian cortical atrophy and a white matter abnormality in the left frontal area were revealed by magnetic resonance imaging. Single photon emission computed tomography demonstrated diffuse low perfusion in the left cerebral hemisphere. Lower amplitude potentials in the left cerebral cortex were evident during somatosensory evoked potential evaluation. These results indicate that hemispheric dysfunction could cause startle-induced epilepsy in this patient.
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PMID:Startle-induced epilepsy in a patient with epidermal nevus syndrome. 958 33

Sturge-Weber syndrome is characterized by the presence of a port-wine nevus, epilepsy, stroke-like episodes, headache, and developmental delay. We studied 20 cases to test the hypothesis that decreased cerebral blood flow alters neurologic function by affecting cellular glucose metabolism. Group A consisted of 10 patients with a mean age of 1.75 years and early seizure onset (6.8 months), whereas group B was composed of older patients (mean age, 15.3 years) with later onset of seizures (3.7 years). Neurologic disease was more severe in group A, but group B had more widespread structural brain defects - shown on computed tomographic scans and magnetic resonance imaging - and metabolic brain defects shown on hexamethylpropyleneamine oxime and [18F] fluorodeoxyglucose single photon emission computed tomographic scans. Six group A cases had hypoperfusion at baseline and five of nine had worsening of perfusion and glucose metabolism 1 year later. A total of 119 stroke-like episodes occurred in six group A cases and eight group B cases; there were 65% fewer strokes in children treated with aspirin. The data suggest that progressive hypoperfusion and glucose hypometabolism are associated with neurologic deterioration in Sturge-Weber syndrome. Longitudinal studies are needed to better define the natural history of disease and to evaluate the safety and efficacy of aspirin therapy.
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PMID:Central nervous system structure and function in Sturge-Weber syndrome: evidence of neurologic and radiologic progression. 988 31

We diagnosed phakomatosis pigmentovascularis type IIIb in an 11-month-old baby who had a giant nevus spilus, a nevus flammeus, and moyamoya disease. Development of the patient was normal until 6 months of age when he developed a sudden onset of focal seizures and left hemiparesis. This patient represents the sixth case of phakomatosis pigmentovascularis type IIIb, including three cases in the Japanese literature, reported thus far. However, to our knowledge, this is the first case with an association to moyamoya disease.
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PMID:Phakomatosis pigmentovascularis type IIIb associated with moyamoya disease. 1002 97

We report on a girl with a congenital pigmented hairy nevus of the scalp, epidermal nevi of the right temple, and localized cranial defects. We have not found other reported cases of giant pigmented hairy nevus of the scalp occurring with absence of underlying cranial bone. We speculate that the localized cranial defects are undergrowth anomalies representative of a paracrinopathy from the overlying nevus or simultaneous bone/skin dysplasia, the former having been resorbed. In the absence of a familial history of epidermal nevi and/or seizures, our patient represents a sporadic case, perhaps a somatic mutation.
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PMID:Epidermal nevi and localized cranial defects. 1009 94

Achromic nevus or nevus depigmentosus is a cutaneous abnormality consisting of a hypopigmented macular lesion which can present as circumscribed irregular, oval, or round or as a unilateral band or streak with a blocklike configuration or arranged along one or more Blaschko lines. When it is systematized, it is indistinguishable from hypomelanosis of Ito. Pigmentary anomalies along the lines of Blaschko can be associated with systemic features. For these reasons, 20 children, referred consecutively for evaluation of segmental, linear achromic nevus, were evaluated to define the incidence of associated abnormal systemic features. Extracutaneous abnormalities were present in 2 of 20 children (10%). The anomalies consisted of pes cavus ipsilateral to the hypopigmentation in one child and mental retardation, seizures, and hemihypertrophy in the second. This study confirms that achromic nevus, even when distributed along Blaschko lines, is commonly a benign lesion that is associated with systemic features in a small minority of cases.
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PMID:Segmental nevus depigmentosus: analysis of 20 patients. 1057 31

We report here 38 Japanese patients with hemimegalencephaly collected by a national survey study. All the patients were sporadic. There was no familial occurrence or sex difference. Some patients had basic diseases: hypomelanosis of Ito in 3 cases and organic nevus syndromes in 8. Most patients had hemiparesis, and 11 were bed-ridden. All except for 3 patients had mental retardation, being profound in half of them. There was no correlation between the side of hemimegalencephaly and clinical symptoms. All patients had epileptic seizures, which first appeared within 24 hours after birth in 4 cases, within 7 days in 7, within a month in 2, within 6 months in 10, and within a year in 4. Antiepileptic drugs were not very effective for controlling seizures. In 7 patients, however, functional hemispherectomy resulted in seizure control and improved development. The patients whose epileptic symptom occurred earlier tended to be more severe in clinical symptoms.
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PMID:[Nation-wide survey on hemimegalencephaly in Japan]. 1082 78

Epidermal nevus syndrome (ENS) is a congenital neurocutaneous disorder characterized by linear nevus with a significant involvement of the nervous, ophthalmological and skeletal systems. Clinical manifestations of ENS include neurological features such as mental retardation, seizures, and movement disorders which are caused by a wide range of neuropathological lesions. We describe three patients with ENS, all of whom had in addition to the characteristic features of ENS intracranial and/or intraspinal lipomas. In one patient the lipoma extended from the thoracal vertebra 8 to the 4th ventricle; in the second patient it was localized on T9, and in the third patient an intracranial lipoma was located at the right cerebellopontine angle. The intraspinal lipomas caused a significant spastic movement disorder. So far, CNS lipomas have not been described as typical neuropathological findings in ENS. The differential diagnosis to encephalocraniocutaneous lipomatosis with the typical finding of CNS lipoma is discussed.
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PMID:CNS lipoma in patients with epidermal nevus syndrome. 1107 Nov 40

Patients with a giant congenital melanocytic nevus can develop melanotic tumors characterized by central nervous system involvement, termed leptomeningeal melanocytosis or neurocutaneous melanosis. Although symptomatic neurocutaneous melanosis is rare, we previously reported distinct magnetic resonance (MR) findings of T1 shortening, strongly suggestive of neurocutaneous melanosis, in 30 percent (6 of 20) of children with giant congenital melanocytic nevi who presented initially without neurological symptoms. The purpose of this study was to determine the incidence of neurocutaneous melanosis in high-risk patients and its long-term clinical significance. Magnetic resonance imaging was recommended for all 46 patients with "at-risk" giant congenital melanocytic nevi involving the skin overlying the dorsal spine or scalp. The clinical histories and follow-up of these patients were evaluated by retrospective chart review. Forty-two underwent MR imaging of the brain and 11 underwent additional MR scanning of the spinal cord. Abnormalities were identified in 14 of 43 MR studies, and 23 percent (n = 10) had T1 shortening indicative of melanotic rests within the brain or meninges. None had associated masses or leptomeningeal thickening. The most common areas of involvement in these 10 included the amygdala (n = 8), cerebellum (n = 5), and pons (n = 3). In the group of 11 patients with spinal MR scans, a tethered spinal cord was demonstrated in one. Additional abnormalities were detected by MR scanning, including a middle cranial fossa arachnoid cyst, a Chiari type I malformation, and a crescentic enhancement that subsequently resolved. Clinical follow-up averaging 5 years (range, 2 to 8 years) revealed that only one of the 46 patients evaluated developed neurological symptoms, manifested as developmental delay, hypotonia, and questionable seizures but no other signs of neurocutaneous melanosis. No patient has developed a cutaneous or central nervous system melanoma. Magnetic resonance findings of neurocutaneous melanosis are relatively common, even in asymptomatic children with giant congenital melanocytic nevi. Although these findings suggest an increased lifetime risk of central nervous system melanoma, they do not signify the eventual development of symptomatic neurocutaneous melanosis during childhood.
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PMID:Giant congenital melanocytic nevi: the significance of neurocutaneous melanosis in neurologically asymptomatic children. 1125 85

The nevus sebaceus syndrome (NSS) is a neurocutaneous disorder characterized by unilateral hyperplasia of skin appendages and skeletal hemihypertrophy, hemimegalencephaly, or hemiatrophy along with disabling seizures. Despite the proneness of the dermal stigmata to eventually undergo neoplastic transformation, the malformative lesions of the central nervous system rarely evolve into frank tumors. We present the case of a 10-year-old girl with left-sided sebaceus nevi, ipsilateral enlargement of the skull, and a desmoplastic neuroepithelial tumor (DNET) in the right fronto-parietal area of the brain. The tumor was removed by surgery. Histologically, it corresponded to a mitotically active small-cell anaplastic astrocytoma with genuine desmoplasia. Investigative methods included immunohistochemical positivity for glial fibrillary acidic protein, lack of expression of neuronal markers, and ultrastructural documentation of sheaths of basal lamina and collagen around tumor cells. A survey of the literature of brain tumors associated with NSS revealed two cases of histologically verified pilocytic astrocytomas, and one each of a choroid plexus papilloma, a mixed glioma, and a meningioma, as well as a subependymal giant cell astrocytoma--the latter possibly in an overlap syndrome of NSS and tuberous sclerosis. We hypothesize that the tumor described herein, one involving both atypical differentiation and enhanced growth potential, is paradigmatic of neuropathological events to be expected in the NSS.
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PMID:Desmoplastic neuroepithelial tumor of infancy in the nevus sebaceus syndrome: report of a unique constellation and review of the literature. 1135 15

Familial cerebral cavernous malformation (CCM) is an autosomal dominant disorder producing vascular anomalies throughout the central nervous system associated with seizures and hemorrhagic stroke. Linkage analysis has shown evidence for at least three genetic loci underlying this disorder with a founder mutation in the Mexican/Hispanic community. We report the first family of Chinese ethnic origin with CCM having a novel mutation in the CCM1 gene. The mutation in exon 19 causes a premature stop codon (Q698X) predicted to produce a truncated Krev1 interaction-trapped 1 (KRIT1) protein. Members of the family with this mutation have a wide range in age of onset with seizures, ataxia, spinal cord vascular malformation, headaches and skin lesions. An additional unrelated sporadic subject with brain lesions compatible with CCM as well as vascular skin findings suggesting the blue rubber bleb nevus (BRBN) syndrome has no mutation detected in the CCM1 gene. These findings expand the phenotype of and demonstrate further evidence for the heterogeneity in the CCM syndrome.
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PMID:Cerebral cavernous malformation: novel mutation in a Chinese family and evidence for heterogeneity. 1195 62


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