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

Rett Syndrome (RS) is a mental retardation syndrome occurring in females consisting of normal pre-, peri-, and neonatal growth and development, followed by rapid regression after 3 but before 30 months, an arrest of the regression and a developmental plateau. The regression results in autistic behavior, with loss of production and comprehension of language, seizures, hyperventilation, characteristic hand-wringing, and ataxic gait. Four case histories of RS from the authors' practice are presented. Management strategies are presented and needed research is suggested.
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PMID:Rett syndrome: case reports and management strategies. 322 56

Clinical and EEG findings have been analysed in six patients with Rett syndrome with a mean follow-up of 3 years and 9 months. After reviewing the diagnostic criteria for inclusion, which are essentially clinical, we emphasize two aspects which have been shortly considered in the literature: a) epileptic seizures, b) peculiar differential characteristics between primary autism and the Rett syndrome behaviour. Moreover, we underline the importance of serial EEG poligraphic records for early diagnosis.
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PMID:[Rett syndrome: clinical aspects and EEG for an early diagnostic assessment]. 324 39

Nine girls with Rett syndrome had 22 electroencephalographic studies performed over 5 years. Nineteen walking tracings demonstrated moderate background slowing. Focal epileptiform activity was observed in 13 studies, 10 of which had bilateral independent foci. Spikes were invariably maximal in central regions, diphasic or triphasic, and of very short duration. In 3 patients, epileptiform activity preceded clinical seizures by up to 2 years. Two children had spontaneous hyperpnea preceding apnea during wakefulness with further background slowing. Video monitoring of 2 children revealed that episodic behavioral changes were not seizures. Ten of 12 sleep recordings had abnormal background activity with absent or rudimentary spindles. Normal activity occurred only in girls younger than 2 1/2 years of age. Epileptiform activity was markedly increased during sleep in 8 tracings in which both wakefulness and sleep were obtained. It was characterized by bilaterally independent and bisynchronous spike-and-wave activity, maximal in parasagittal areas. One patient had bursts of high-voltage slow-wave activity followed by attenuation. No apneic episodes were recorded during sleep. In Rett syndrome, electroencephalographic abnormalities include background slowing, centrally located short-duration spikes, and increased epileptiform activity during sleep. This activity commonly preceded clinical seizures in patients studied at initial presentation.
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PMID:EEG abnormalities aid diagnosis of Rett syndrome. 324 72

Recent progress from pooled clinical experience is reviewed. The approximate number of documented cases of Rett syndrome (RS) as of October 1986 was 1,100. Three sister pairs, 3 monozygotic twin pairs (both twin girls affected), 3 dizygotic twin pairs (one twin girl affected) are known. Genetics are discussed based on these and other known occurrences. Early seizure-onset variants have been reported in a dozen cases representing various countries. Approximately 20 incomplete RS related cases, also termed "formes frustes," are documented as of October 1986. An actual Swedish series of 66 classical RS, 4 "formes frustes," 2 early seizure-onset variants and 9 other clinically near related atypical cases is summarized. A suggested late stage IV spinal cord impairment is discussed, as well as the whole adult multifacetted complex neurological pattern. Gastrointestinal pathology is discussed with reference to possible generalized neuropeptide disturbances.
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PMID:Rett syndrome: epidemiology and nosology--progress in knowledge 1986--a conference communication. 332 95

Rett syndrome is a progressive encephalopathy observed only in girls, who are apparently normal until 6 to 12 months of age. It is characterized by autism, dementia, ataxia, stereotypic hand movements, hyperreflexia, spasticity, and seizures. Eight of 10 females with Rett syndrome evaluated at the Alfred I. duPont Institute have C-shaped neuromuscular curves averaging 29 degrees (range 22-48 degrees). Curve progression was seen in all eight patients and occurred despite bracing in four, averaging 21 degrees (range 12-31 degrees). Five patients, two of whom were braced, have undergone posterior spinal fusion with segmental instrumentation for curves ranging in size from 49 to 105 degrees (average 67 degrees).
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PMID:Scoliosis in Rett syndrome. 335 Sep 46

Parents of 63 North American girls with Rett syndrome filled out retrospective questionnaires in a project of the International Rett Syndrome Association, a parent group. No consistent pattern was revealed of possible etiological factors related to environmental insults; however, additional information gathered supported a genetic etiology. The survey included one pair of identical twins and one child with consanguineous parents. There were 46 male sibs and 34 female sibs. These data weigh against any theory relating etiology to a gene on the X chromosome which is lethal to males in utero. Figures were gathered on a number of clinical items. These were: onset of symptoms between 6 and 18 months of age, 83%; autistic withdrawal, 73%; never walked independently, 23%; hyperventilators with abdominal swelling, 63%; night laughter, 83%. The average age of walking of those who walked was 19 months and the average onset of seizure disorders was between 3 1/2 and 4 years of age. This paper ends by discussing the limitations of a parent questionnaire.
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PMID:Rett syndrome: a survey of North American patients. 339 38

Rett's syndrome is a progressive disorder that occurs in females and is characterized by autistic behavior, dementia, ataxia, loss of purposeful use of the hands, and seizures. Patients with Rett's syndrome have been observed to have stereotyped hand movements (hand-washing) and to exhibit intermittent hyperventilation. To characterize more precisely the sleep and respiratory patterns associated with this disorder, polygraphic studies were made during sleep and wakefulness in 11 patients with this syndrome. These studies showed abnormal respiratory patterns during wakefulness, and abnormal sleep and electroencephalographic characteristics. The patients had decreased percentages of rapid-eye-movement sleep, and during wakefulness, a pattern of disorganized breathing was observed in all 11 patients and consisted of hypoxia followed by a period of increased respiratory rate and effort. The occurrence of disorganized breathing and compensatory hyperpnea during wakefulness with regular, continuous breathing during sleep is characteristic of Rett's syndrome and suggests an altered or impaired voluntary/behavioral respiratory control system.
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PMID:Rett's syndrome: characterization of respiratory patterns and sleep. 357 23

The results of studies of seven girls with Rett's syndrome and two additional cases suggestive of Rett's syndrome are presented. After normal neurological development up to the age of 7 to 20 months, there was a rapid regression of higher cortical function. Rett's syndrome was initially manifested by a delay of further motor development and the appearance of autistic traits. As the disease progressed, there was a loss of ability to crawl, loss of purposeful hand movements, abnormal respirations, truncal ataxia, seizures, and spastic increase in muscle tone. Blood chemistries, including ammonia levels, were normal. Metabolic interference, a recently hypothesized form of inheritance, may occur in this syndrome.
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PMID:Rett's syndrome: progression of symptoms from infancy to childhood. 359 18

Rett's syndrome is a progressive disorder in female patients, characterized by autistic behavior, dementia, ataxia, loss of purposeful use of the hands, and seizures. The electroencephalographic (EEG) characteristics of 17 patients with Rett's syndrome, studied between the ages of 1 and 16 years, are reported and correlated with a recently proposed system of clinical staging. Although a specific diagnostic EEG pattern was not seen in these patients, we did observe a progressive deterioration in the EEG, characterized by a slowing of EEG activity, a loss of normal sleep EEG characteristics, and the appearance of multifocal epileptiform abnormalities, followed by a pattern of generalized slow spike-wave activity. These characteristics appear to be typically seen in patients with Rett's syndrome and can be correlated with clinical staging. The EEG may be of benefit in identifying variations or subgroups in patients with Rett's syndrome as a complement to the clinical examination.
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PMID:Rett's syndrome. Correlation of electroencephalographic characteristics with clinical staging. 363 78

Rett syndrome, named after Rett's first description in 1966, evolves typically in 3 stages: after normal early psychomotor development up to the age of 6-24 months, stagnation and regression occur over a few months resulting in severe dementia, loss of speech, of social response and of purposeful hand use. This is accompanied by particular stereotyped hand movements and usually also by deceleration of head growth. The further course is often stable for a prolonged period, or only slowly progressive. Common features are seizures, episodic hyperpnea, scoliosis, spasticity and vasomotor disturbances of lower limbs. Rett syndrome has been observed only in girls, all cases (with 2 exceptions) being sporadic. This is probably explained by a X-linked dominant new mutation lethal in males. The pathogenesis is still unknown: no consistent metabolic, morphologic or neuroradiologic abnormalities have been found. According to some epidemiologic investigations, Rett syndrome affects about 1:15,000 girls and is thus responsible for a considerable proportion of severely retarded girls. Within one year the authors have retrospectively diagnosed 15 cases, which is assumed to represent only about a third of patients in Switzerland.
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PMID:[Rett syndrome: a progressive neurological syndrome in girls]. 370 8


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