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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (seizures)
80,221 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Tuberous sclerosis is an autosomal dominant disorder of hamartoma formation in which manifestations may occur in skin, brain, and viscera. In the past, it was believed that the typical presentation included seizures, mental retardation, and facial angiofibromas ("adenoma sebaceum"). This disorder is now recognized to show wide variability of expression. There are only four cases of tuberous sclerosis in pregnancy in the literature. Two of these had favorable maternal and fetal outcomes and the remaining two presented with serious maternal and fetal complications. These included acute intra-abdominal bleeding due to a ruptured renal tumor, which led to renal failure requiring hemodialysis, and severe preeclampsia with pathologically enlarged kidneys noted at the time of cesarean section. This study presents two more cases of tuberous sclerosis in pregnancy. The first case had renal involvement with bleeding into a renal cyst, renal failure, preeclampsia, and severe intrauterine growth retardation. The second case was complicated by preterm premature rupture of the membranes and preterm labor. Renal involvement appears to be the single most important prognostic factor in pregnancies with tuberous sclerosis. Renal evaluation should be performed in any patient who presents for preconceptional counseling.
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PMID:Tuberous sclerosis in pregnancy. 218 12

Nonsalicylate, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) can be divided into 4 chemical classes: acetic acids, fenamic acids, oxicams and propionic acids. Most NSAID overdoses result in a benign outcome. Of 50,614 exposures reported to poison centres in the United States in a 2-year period, 131 (0.26%) had a major outcome, with 10 deaths. Despite the generally mild effects reported in large patient series, isolated case reports have documented serious toxicity, such as seizures, hypotension, apnoea, coma and renal failure. The majority of these consequences occur after ingestion of substantial quantities by adults attempting suicide. Rarely, with ibuprofen and piroxicam, children who ingest small amounts in accidental exposure develop serious toxicity. Typical signs and symptoms of NSAID overdose include nausea, vomiting, headache, drowsiness, blurred vision and dizziness. Seizures are rarely documented across all NSAID classes, with the exception of mefenamic acid (where seizures occur in over one-third of cases), or following massive ingestion of other agents. Drugs in the propionic acid group have produced metabolic acidosis, respiratory depression and coma in severe cases. Ibuprofen is the agent with the most published data on overdose, probably because it is available without a prescription in many countries. Symptoms are unlikely after ingestion of 100 mg/kg or less, and are usually not life-threatening unless more than 400 mg/kg is ingested. There is some relationship between plasma concentrations and the potential for development of symptoms, but plasma concentrations have no impact on treatment decisions. Treatment of NSAID overdose is entirely supportive. Recent trends in emergency department procedures regarding gastric decontamination are evolving towards the recommended administration of activated charcoal without gastric emptying in patients presenting more than 1 hour after ingestion, although gastric lavage, followed by administration of activated charcoal, may be advisable in patients who present earlier. Home administration of syrup of ipecac is still recommended if treatment is given shortly after ingestion, with a few exceptions: for example, ipecac is contraindicated after ingestion of mefenamic acid or ibuprofen in amounts greater than 400 mg/kg. Urine alkalinisation and diuresis have been recommended to enhance the elimination of NSAIDs, based on a pKa in the range of 3 to 5. However, because the drugs are universally highly protein bound, with little unchanged renal excretion, this technique is not likely to be beneficial. Haemodialysis is also unlikely to enhance elimination, but may be required if oliguric renal failure develops. Multiple dose activated charcoal may be useful in enhancing elimination of NSAIDs with long half-lives, such as piroxicam and sulindac.
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PMID:Toxic effects of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs in overdose. An overview of recent evidence on clinical effects and dose-response relationships. 219 51

Between 1984 and 1989, orthotopic cardiac transplantations were done in 90 patients from 10 to 65 years of age for end-stage, refractory congestive cardiomyopathy. Two patients had had ischemic strokes 5 months and 18 years, respectively, before transplantation. Six patients (7%) suffered acute neurologic events perioperatively. Three patients suffered cerebral infarctions. In 1 case this occurred 10 days before transplantation--probably as a result of systemic hypoperfusion--with the placement of ventricular assist devices. Two others suffered infarctions 5 and 21 days, respectively, after transplantation, each of probable embolic origin. Two patients had an acute intracerebral hemorrhage 21 and 36 days, respectively, after transplantation; both were located within the basal ganglia and subcortical regions. Both patients had moderate to severe hypertension, and in 1, renal failure and a coagulopathy developed before hemorrhage. Tremor, seizures, and an altered level of consciousness developed in 1 patient as an apparent toxic reaction to cyclosporine treatment. Only 1 patient died as a result of the neurologic complication--of an acute intracerebral hemorrhage. Three patients recovered fully, 2 partially. Only the case of drug toxicity could be directly attributed to the transplantation procedure itself. We conclude that the risk of an acute neurologic insult with orthotopic cardiac transplantation is low but may result from drug toxicity, cerebral ischemia, or hemorrhagic mechanisms.
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PMID:Neurologic complications of cardiac transplantation. 221 70

Cocaine abuse has emerged as a major public health problem among young adults. Illicit use of cocaine has been associated with an increasing array of medical complications. Both traumatic and nontraumatic rhabdomyolysis, often complicated by acute renal failure, has recently been described following cocaine abuse. The present report describes our experience with 15 such patients and serves to further define the spectrum of muscle injury associated with cocaine abuse ranging from the incidental finding of elevated serum levels of muscle enzymes to acute renal failure. Those patients who developed renal failure experienced more severe rhabdomyolysis in association with trauma, seizures or hyperpyrexia.
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PMID:Rhabdomyolysis and acute renal failure associated with cocaine abuse. 223 31

Acute zinc toxicosis from the ingestion of pennies was diagnosed in a dog with Heinz body hemolytic anemia (PCV = 14%), leukocytosis (51,000 cells/ml) with a left shift (3,060 band neutrophils; 37,740 segmented neutrophils) and monocytosis (4,080 cells/ml), azotemia (BUN = 60 mg/dl), bilirubinemia (total bilirubin = 5.3 mg/dl), hypokalemia (3.0 mEq/L), high serum alkaline phosphatase activity (691 U/L), high total plasma solids (8.1 g/dl), hemoglobinuria, and proteinuria. Despite aggressive medical treatment, renal failure ensued, and the dog died of cardiac arrest. The clinical signs, clinical course, and laboratory findings in this dog were similar to what has been reported in other cases of acute zinc toxicosis in dogs, with the exception of a history of generalized seizures and the findings of Heinz bodies. Although a causative relationship between plasma zinc values and Heinz body formation cannot be proven, their association suggests that oxidative damage to erythrocyte hemoglobin and cell membrane proteins may be involved in the pathogenesis of zinc-induced hemolysis.
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PMID:Heinz body hemolytic anemia associated with high plasma zinc concentration in a dog. 226 50

Quinidine, procainamide and disopyramide are antiarrhythmic drugs in the class 1A category. These drugs have a low toxic to therapeutic ratio, and their use is associated with a number of serious adverse effects during long term therapy and life-threatening sequelae following acute overdose. Class 1A agents inhibit the fast inward sodium current and decrease the maximum rate of rise and amplitude of the cardiac action potential. Prolonged Q-T interval and, to a lesser extent, QRS duration may be observed at therapeutic concentrations of quinidine. With increasing plasma concentrations, progressive depression of automaticity and conduction velocity occur. 'Quinidine syncope' (a transient loss of consciousness due to paroxysmal ventricular tachycardia, frequently of the torsade de pointes type) occurs with therapeutic dosing, often in the first few days of therapy. Extracardiac adverse effects of quinidine include potentially intolerable gastrointestinal effects and hypersensitivity reactions such as fever, rash, blood dyscrasias and hepatitis. Procainamide produces electrophysiological changes that are similar to those of quinidine, although Q-T interval prolongation with the former is less pronounced at therapeutic concentrations. Hypersensitivity reactions including fever, rash and (more seriously) agranulocytosis are associated with procainamide, and a frequent adverse effect requiring cessation of therapy is the development of systemic lupus erythematosus. Of the 3 drugs, disopyramide has the most pronounced negative inotropic effects, which are especially significant in patients with pre-existing left ventricular dysfunction. As with quinidine, unexpected 'disopyramide syncope' at therapeutic concentrations has been described. Anticholinergic side effects are common with this drug and may require cessation of therapy. Disopyramide therapy may unpredictably induce severe hypoglycaemia. Severe intoxication with the class 1A agents may result from acute accidental or intentional overdose, or from accumulation of the drugs during long term therapy. Acute overdose can result in severe disturbances of cardiac conduction and hypotension, frequently accompanied by central nervous system toxicity. Decreased renal function can cause significant accumulation of procainamide and its active metabolite acecainide (N-acetyl-procainamide), resulting in severe intoxication. Mild to moderate renal dysfunction is less likely to lead to quinidine or disopyramide intoxication, unless renal failure is severe or concurrent hepatic dysfunction is present. Management of acute intoxication with class 1A drugs includes gut decontamination with provision of respiratory support and treatment of seizures as needed. Hypertonic sodium bicarbonate, by antagonising the inhibitory effect of quinidine on sodium conductance, may reverse many or all manifestations of cardiovascular toxicity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Poisoning due to class IA antiarrhythmic drugs. Quinidine, procainamide and disopyramide. 228 95

Forty-six (92%) outborn and four (8%) inborn term or near-term neonates were admitted for extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) treatment to a neonatal intensive care unit between July 1, 1985, and November 1, 1987. All infants had PAO2-PaO2 greater than or equal to 600 mm Hg in spite of aggressive conventional ventilatory and pharmacologic therapy. All patients were offered rescue treatment with high-frequency oscillatory ventilation (HFOV), and only if there was no improvement in PAO2-PaO2 with HFOV were infants treated using ECMO. Four patients died before receiving an adequate trial of HFOV and before emergency ECMO support could be initiated; 21 patients, all of whom survived to hospital discharge, responded to HFOV; 25 patients ultimately required ECMO therapy for cardiopulmonary support, with 22 (88%) surviving to discharge. Neonates responding to HFOV were of slightly younger gestational age (38 +/- 2 weeks vs 40 +/- 2 weeks, mean +/- SD; P less than .001) and more frequently had clinical evidence of pneumonia (11 of 21 vs 2 of 25; P less than .002). There was no statistically significant difference in outcome with respect to the number of ventilator days, hospital days, or survival between patients responding to HFOV and patients who required ECMO. Morbidity was increased in ECMO patients, with bleeding abnormalities, seizures, and renal failure occurring more frequently than in HFOV-treated infants. Overall, 92% (46 of 50) of the patients were treated with a staged protocol using HFOV before ECMO. A total of 46% (21 of 46) responded to HFOV treatment alone and did not require ECMO therapy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:High-frequency oscillatory ventilation and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation for the treatment of acute neonatal respiratory failure. 229 3

The fate of tuberous sclerosis (TS) patients after renal transplantation (RT) for end-stage renal failure remains to be defined. We report three patients with a posttransplantation follow-up averaging 54 months and review 6 previously published cases. Three women, aged 27-46 years, received a cadaver kidney 26-67 months after starting dialysis. None had mental retardation, 2 had suffered from seizures during infancy and 2 had intracranial calcification; neurological involvement was equally mild in the 6 reported patients. Currently, 16-84 months after RT, our 3 patients are fully rehabilitated with a well-functioning graft (serum creatinine 1.2-1.7 mg/dl). Results of RT are also satisfactory in the 4 other reported cases for whom a follow-up is available, except for 1 death unrelated to the initial disease. Neurologic disorders did not progress. Renal cell carcinoma was discovered in one removed kidney, and cells suggestive of malignant transformation in another case. No metastases were discovered up to 4 years later. No neoplastic transformation was observed up to 7 years after RT in the 3 patients who retained their native kidneys. TS patients with end-stage renal failure are good candidates for RT. The probably small risk of neoplastic transformation of native kidneys warrants a close monitoring by CT scan of the few patients who have not undergone bilateral nephrectomy.
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PMID:Outcome of patients with tuberous sclerosis after renal transplantation. 231 13

The marked gender influence on the occurrence of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) indicates that genetic and hormonal factors may be important in the etiology of this illness. However, few differences in clinical manifestations between males and females have been reported. To further investigate gender differences in SLE, the prevalence of 23 clinical manifestations of SLE were compared in a cohort of 62 men and 299 women. After adjusting for differences in age, race, and duration of followup, men were found to more commonly have seizures (odds ratio = 1.65; 95% confidence interval = 1.09, 2.49), and showed a trend to progress to renal failure more often (odds ratio = 1.40; 95% confidence interval = 0.96, 2.03) than women. Gender differences were not evident for the remaining 21 clinical features. The clinical similarity between men and women with SLE represents a circumstance in which the use of clinically defined patient subsets does not appear to facilitate the investigation of potential pathogenetic or etiologic factors.
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PMID:Systemic lupus erythematosus in men: a multivariate analysis of gender differences in clinical manifestations. 231 21

The central nervous system (CNS) sensitivity to the hypnotic (general anesthetic) action of phenobarbital and to the neurotoxic (convulsive) action of theophylline is greater in rats with acute renal failure than in normal animals, consistent with clinical observations. In the case of phenobarbital, this increased sensitivity can be produced in normal rats by infusion of a solution of the lyophilized dialysate of serum from rats with renal failure. It was hypothesized that the relevant constituent(s) of this dialysate may circulate between the blood and the intestinal lumen and that it (they) can be adsorbed by orally administered activated charcoal and thereby removed from the body. If so, treatment of renal failure rats with activated charcoal should partly reverse the increased CNS sensitivity to phenobarbital and to other drugs similarly affected. Accordingly, rats with renal failure produced by bilateral ligation of ureters were given an aqueous suspension of activated charcoal, about 1 g per kg body weight, orally every 8 hr for six doses. Uremic controls received equal volumes of water. About 2 hr after the last dose, the animals were infused i.v. with phenobarbital to onset of loss of righting reflex or with theophylline to onset of maximal seizures. In the phenobarbital study, charcoal treatment partly reversed the hypothermia associated with renal failure and caused a reduction of creatinine and total bilirubin concentrations in serum. The cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) concentration of phenobarbital at onset of loss of the righting reflex was significantly higher in charcoal treated rats than in their controls.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Kinetics of drug action in disease states. XXXIX. Effect of orally administered activated charcoal on the hypnotic activity of phenobarbital and the neurotoxicity of theophylline administered intravenously to rats with renal failure. 233 96


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