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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (
seizures
)
80,221
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The causes of chronic, recurrent headaches, the electroencephalographic findings and the response to phenytoin (Dilantin) and other medications have been evaluated in 100 children. A history of head injury was reported in 41% and convulsions had occurred in 15%. Electroencephalographic dysrhythmias were severe in 18 and moderate in 27%. Migraine was diagnosed in 42% and
tension headaches
in 18%; psychogenic factors complicated learning disabilities and minimal brain dysfunction in 21%. Phenytoin controlled migraine in 77% and headaches diagnosed as
seizure
equivalents in 40%; the response was unrelated to the degree of electroencephalographic abnormality. An abnormal electroencephalogram and response to phenytoin are insufficient criteria for a diagnosis of epilepsy in children with recurrent headaches.
...
PMID:Recurrent headaches in 100 children. Electroencephalographic abnormalities and response to phenytoin (Dilantin). 63 3
We retrospectively reviewed the emergency department records of 77 children and adolescents seen in an emergency department with the chief complaint of fainting. Upon careful review, 20 patients had not had any type of syncopal or near-syncopal episode. Of the remaining 57 patients, 40 experienced syncope, and 17 patients had near-syncope. The most frequent diagnoses in the syncopal patients were vasovagal syncope (50%), orthostatic hypotension (20%), atypical
seizure
(7.5%), migraine headache (5%), and minor head trauma (5%). The most frequent diagnoses in the near-syncope group were lightheadedness (29%),
seizure
(18%),
tension headache
(12%), and migraine (6%). Seventeen and one half percent of syncopal patients had abnormalities of vital signs, orthostatic vital signs, glucose, hematocrit, or ECG; none of the near-syncopal patients had abnormalities. We conclude that initial evaluation of first-episode syncope should include orthostatic vital signs, glucose, hematocrit, and ECG with further studies performed as clinically indicated.
...
PMID:Syncope in children and adolescents. 274 10
Headache can be an invaluable premonitory signal of imminent subarachnoid hemorrhage and cerebral infarction and can herald the onset of ominous and sometimes elusive disorders (arterial dissection, encephalitis, systemic and central vasculitides, and cerebral venous thrombosis) which have the potential for neurologic catastrophe and are often not obvious on routine CT brain imaging. Only rarely does serious underlying disease give rise to a headache that exactly mimics a migraine or
tension headache
. Inevitably, there are atypical features or warning signals. A limited number of serious causes for headache which may be "CT-negative" should be considered in patients with "red flag" manifestations, such as
seizures
and cognitive changes. These should prompt further investigation with MRI and/or lumbar puncture.
...
PMID:Headache as a symptom of ominous disease. What are the warning signals? 915 6
The interictal EEG is often normal in epilepsy patients, particularly with partial
seizures
of extratemporal origin. Quantitative techniques of EEG analysis may increase the yield of diagnostic abnormality in such patients. Thirty patients with partial
seizures
of frontal or temporal origin had EEG recorded from left frontal (F7-C3), right frontal (F8-C4), left posterior (T5-O1), and right posterior (T6-O2) derivations. Four-second epochs were used to compute power in the delta (0.25-4.0 Hz), theta (4.25-8.0 Hz), alpha (8.25-13 Hz), and beta (13.25-30 Hz) bands. The ratio of high (8.25-30 Hz) to low (0.25-8 Hz) power on the left and the right was measured, as was the ratio between the left and the right hemisphere total power. The mean frequency deviation in the alpha band between the left and the right hemispheres was also measured, and spectral mobility was determined in the right and the left frontal regions. These values were also calculated in normal subjects and
tension headache
patients with normal EEGs.
Seizure
patients with abnormal interictal EEGs had decreased ratios of high to low power, greater asymmetry of total power and alpha frequency, and reduced spectral mobility on the side of their EEG foci. Epileptics with normal interictal EEGs had lower ratios of high to low power, greater alpha frequency asymmetry, and lower spectral mobility than did headache patients or normal controls. Power and frequency measurements, and determination of spectral measures such as mobility, can be done with commercially available digital EEG equipment. They may demonstrate otherwise obscure asymmetries in the interictal EEG and thereby aid in epilepsy diagnosis and classification.
Seizure
1998 Feb
PMID:Interictal quantitative EEG in epilepsy. 954 24
Intractable headaches, the so-called 'lupus headaches', have been long thought of as a common and characteristic manifestation of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Seventy-eight patients with SLE, including 10 patients with definite central nervous system (CNS) involvement, and 89 healthy individuals matched for age, sex and socioeconomic status, were studied by a specific questionnaire addressing the characteristics and type of headache. Clinical features of SLE, neurological manifestations and treatment, disease severity and autoantibody profiles were correlated to the presence of headache. One year prevalence of headache was similar between patients (32%) and otherwise healthy individuals (30%). No significant differences regarding frequency, family history of headache and need for analgesic medication were observed. Headache refractory to analgesic treatment, but responsive to corticosteroid regimen, was recorded in only one patient. Clinical and serological features of SLE, including Raynaud's phenomenon and the presence of anticardiolipin antibodies, were not significantly different between headache sufferers and non-sufferers. In the majority of patients reporting headache, anxiety and/or depression co-existed. Episodic
tension headache
was the most frequent type, while migraine was traced in a quarter of headache sufferers. Neither the presence nor the clinical type of headache was related to, or predictive of, the development of
seizures
or psychosis. These results indicate that headache is not specifically related to SLE expression or severity, and suggest that accepting the presence even of a severe headache as a neurological manifestation of SLE in the absence of
seizures
or overt psychosis may result in overestimation of the disease status.
...
PMID:Headache in systemic lupus erythematosus: a controlled study. 956 71
A total of 42 patients were submitted to a clinical, behavioural and neuropsychological evaluation with the objective of eventual surgical treatment of epilepsy refractory to the usual clinical therapies. Prolonged video-EEG monitoring, MRI hippocampal volume measurement, lateralization of speech and memory using the amobarbital (Wada) test were used. Of 18 operated cases, 12 were submitted to temporal lobectomy, with a follow-up of 6-30 months; 8 patients had significant improvement in
seizures
control; 2 patients had partial improvement in
seizure
frequency and intensity; 2 patients had no improvement in
seizure
control. One patient underwent right frontal lobectomy with total remission of
seizures
and 5 had callosotomy with varying degrees of success. There was no mortality. Morbidity included one subdural hematoma, one transient hemiparesis, one episode of mania, one lobar pneumonia and frequent immediately post-operative muscular
tension headaches
. These early results indicate good results of temporal lobectomy patients investigated through a non-invasive presurgical evaluation.
...
PMID:Epilepsy surgery without invasive EEG. Early results of a new program. 962 2
An early diagnosis and heparin therapy have contributed to a decreased mortality in cerebral venous thrombosis (CVT). However, predictors of outcome are difficult to identify, because most studies suffered heterogeneity in diagnostic findings and treatments, retrospective design, and recruitment bias. The aim of this study was to evaluate the clinical outcome in 55 consecutive patients with CVT admitted over a 4-year period. The study population consisted of 42 women and 13 men, with a median age of 39 years (range 16-68). The diagnosis was performed with MRI in 53 patients, and angiography in 2. The outcome was assessed with the modified Rankin scale (mRs). After a median follow-up of 36 months (range: 12-60), 45 patients were independent (mRS 0-2), and 10 were dependent or dead (mRS 3-6). Of 48 survivors, 7 had
seizures
, 6 motor deficits, 5 visual field defects, 29 headache (migraine in 14,
tension headache
in 13, other in 2). The logistic regression analysis found focal deficits and cancer at time of diagnosis, as independent predictors of dependence or death at year 3, and isolated intra-cranial hypertension as an independent predictor of survival and independence. Mortality rates are low in the absence of cancer and focal deficits, and more than 80 % of survivors are independent after 3 years. However, 3/4 of survivors have residual symptoms. Therefore, despite a low mortality rate, CVT remains a serious disorder.
...
PMID:Cerebral venous thrombosis 3-year clinical outcome in 55 consecutive patients. 1252 89
To evaluate the source location and clinical significance of rhythmic mid-temporal theta discharges (RMTD) by MEG in non-epileptic and epileptic patients, we conducted simultaneous MEG and EEG recordings with a whole-scalp 306-channel neuromagnetometer in three patients: one with right temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE), one with right frontal lobe epilepsy (FLE), and one with
tension headache
. We visually detected the RMTD activity and interictal spikes, and then localised their generators by MEG source modelling. We repeated MEG measurement 3 months after right anterior temporal lobectomy (ATL) in the TLE patient; 3 months after anticonvulsant medication in the FLE patient. In epileptic patients, RMTD activities were found during drowsiness over the left temporal channels of both MEG and EEG recordings, and their generators were localised to the left posterior inferior temporal region. In the patient with
tension headache
, RMTD was localised in the right inferior temporal area. When the epileptic patients became
seizure
free with disappearance of epileptic spikes, RMTD was still found over the left temporal channels. Besides, some bursts of RMTD appeared also in the right temporal channels in our TLE patient after ATL. Our results indicate that the source of RMTD activity is located in the fissural cortex of the posterior inferior temporal region. As a physiologic rhythm related to dampened vigilance, RMTD has no direct relation to epileptogenic activity.
Seizure
2003 Jun
PMID:Magnetoencephalographic study of rhythmic mid-temporal discharges in non-epileptic and epileptic patients. 1276 69
Headache is a common complaint, occurring in >90% of school age children. The frequency increases with increasing age and the etiologies range from tension to life-threatening infections and brain tumors. Migraine is the most frequent cause of acute and recurrent headaches in children. The overall prevalence of non-migraine headaches is 10-25%. A thorough history, physical and neurological examination, and appropriate diagnostic testing if indicated will enable the physician to distinguish migraine and
tension headaches
from those of a secondary etiology. In this review, we present an updated overview of childhood headaches. The recently developed International Classification of Headache Disorders, second edition ICHD-II will be summarized. The Quality Standards Subcommittee of the American Academy of Neurology AAN and the Practice Committee of Child Neurology Society CNS recommendations for neuroimaging of children with recurrent headaches concluded that routine neuroimaging is not indicated if the neurological examination is normal. Neuroimaging should be considered in children with recent onset of severe headache, change in the headache type, associated focal neurological features, or
seizures
. Trends in the management guidelines will be highlighted.
...
PMID:Updated overview of pediatric headache and migraine. 1776 54
Differentiating between psychogenic nonepileptic spells (PNES) and epileptic
seizures
without video-EEG monitoring is difficult. The presence of specific medical comorbidities may discriminate the two, helping physicians suspect PNES over epilepsy earlier. A retrospective analysis comparing the medical comorbidities of patients with PNES with those of patients with epilepsy was performed in 280 patients diagnosed with either PNES (N = 158, 74.7% females) or epilepsy (N = 122, 46.7% females) in the Epilepsy Monitoring Unit (EMU) of the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center over a two-year period. Patients with PNES, compared to those with epilepsy, were mostly female, significantly more likely to have a history of abuse, had more functional somatic syndromes (fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome, chronic pain syndrome,
tension headaches
, and irritable bowel syndrome), and had more medical illnesses that are chronic with intermittent attacks (migraines, asthma, and GERD). The presence of at least of one these disorders may lead physicians to suspect PNES over epilepsy and expedite appropriate referral for video-EEG monitoring for diagnosis.
...
PMID:Medical comorbidities in patients with psychogenic nonepileptic spells (PNES) referred for video-EEG monitoring. 2374 95
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