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)

From November 1982 to May 1999, 28 children with Rett syndrome were followed-up for a medium period of 6 years and 2 months. Regression of developmental milestones started at the age between 5 and 20 months. Nineteen cases of typical Rett syndrome had uneventful pre and perinatal periods, loss of previously acquired purposeful hand skills, mental and motor regression and developed hand stereotypies; sixteen had head growth deceleration and 12 gait apraxia. Nine patients were atypical cases, 2 formes frustres, 2 congenital, 3 with early seizure onset, 1 preserved speech and 1 male. Epilepsy was present in 21 patients, predominantly partial seizures and the drug of choice was carbamazepine (15 patients). In the initial evaluation most patients were distributed on Stages II and III and on follow-up on Stages III and IV. Three children died.
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PMID:[Rett syndrome: retrospective and prospective study of 28 patients]. 1146 Jan 88

Environmental restriction or deprivation early in development can induce social, cognitive, affective, and motor abnormalities similar to those associated with autism. Conversely, rearing animals in larger, more complex environments results in enhanced brain structure and function, including increased brain weight, dendritic branching, neurogenesis, gene expression, and improved learning and memory. Moreover, in animal models of CNS insult (e.g., gene deletion), a more complex environment has attenuated or prevented the sequelae of the insult. Of relevance is the prevention of seizures and attenuation of their neuropathological sequelae as a consequence of exposure to a more complex environment. Relatively little attention, however, has been given to the issue of sensitive periods associated with such effects, the relative importance of social versus inanimate stimulation, or the unique contribution of exercise. Our studies have examined the effects of environmental complexity on the development of the restricted, repetitive behavior commonly observed in individuals with autism. In this model, a more complex environment substantially attenuates the development of the spontaneous and persistent stereotypies observed in deer mice reared in standard laboratory cages. Our findings support a sensitive period for such effects and suggest that early enrichment may have persistent neuroprotective effects after the animal is returned to a standard cage environment. Attenuation or prevention of repetitive behavior by environmental complexity was associated with increased neuronal metabolic activity, increased dendritic spine density, and elevated neurotrophin (BDNF) levels in brain regions that are part of cortical-basal ganglia circuitry. These effects were not observed in limbic areas such as the hippocampus.
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PMID:Environmental complexity and central nervous system development and function. 1536 62

Rett syndrome (RTT) is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by cognitive regression, loss of purposeful hand movements and speech, stereotypies, ataxia, seizures, mental retardation and acquired microcephaly. Mutations in MECP2, encoding methyl-CpG-binding protein 2, are responsible for approximately 90% of classic RTT cases. RTT displays phenotypic overlap with Angelman syndrome, a disorder caused by loss of expression of the imprinted gene UBE3A. MeCP2 binds to methylated DNA and may alter the expression of imprinted genes, thereby suggesting a mechanistic link between the two disorders. Here, we tested the hypothesis that MeCP2 deficiency affects expression of Ube3a in mouse models of RTT. As Ube3a is only imprinted in brain, we evaluated Ube3a expression in brains of 15 different litters of neonatal or 8-week-old male Mecp2 mutant mice by real-time quantitative RT-PCR and western blot analysis. We found no significant differences between Mecp2(tm1.1Bird/Y) or Mecp2(tm1.1Jae/Y) mutants and their wild-type male siblings that served as negative controls. In positive control mice carrying a maternally inherited Ube3a deletion, Ube3a sense transcript and protein levels were drastically reduced. Our data contrast with two recent reports of substantially decreased Ube3a expression in brain tissues of MeCP2-deficient mice. We, therefore, challenge the conclusion that decreased UBE3A/Ube3a expression contributes to the pathophysiology of RTT.
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PMID:Ube3a expression is not altered in Mecp2 mutant mice. 1675 45

This study examined the nature and frequency of neurological and EEG abnormalities in 60 young children (ages 2-6 years) with pervasive developmental disorders. A number of standard neurological functions could not be adequately assessed due to the young age of the children and/or limited comprehension and cooperation. The most common neurological deficits were hyporeflexia, stereotypies, and hypotonia. EEG abnormalities were identified in 32% of the children while only two children were known to have clinical seizures. The frequency of cases with hypotonia or hyporeflexia was more common than in older children with this diagnosis. Results also indicate that EEG abnormalities are common in this young population but clinical seizures are rare, confirming other studies.
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PMID:Abnormalities on the neurological examination and EEG in young children with pervasive developmental disorders. 1704 91

Rett syndrome is a neurodevelopmental disorder that almost exclusively affects females. The clinical course as well as the electroencephalogram pattern are characteristic and have been correlated to the clinical stages of the disease. Sixty to 70 percent of the patients develop epilepsy. The aim of this retrospective study was to investigate the correlation between clinical stages and electroencephalogram stages and to more specifically correlate epileptic activity in electroencephalograms with the clinical symptoms of patients. The clinical development and electroencephalogram results of 11 patients diagnosed with Rett syndrome between 1 and 33 years old are compared. In 8 of 11 patients, a correlation was found between electroencephalogram stage and clinical stage. In three of them, epileptic activity in the electroencephalogram was not associated with clinical seizures. Some typical symptoms of Rett patients (hand stereotypies, vacant spells) can be difficult to differentiate from seizures. Therefore application of antiepileptic treatment should be well evaluated, as the clinical course is decisive.
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PMID:Rett syndrome: clinical and electrophysiologic aspects. 1727 60

Mutations in the transcriptional repressor methyl CpG binding protein 2 (MeCP2) are responsible for most cases of Rett Syndrome (RS), a severe neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by developmental regression, minimal speech, seizures, postnatal microcephaly and hand stereotypies. Absence of the maternal copy of ubiquitin protein ligase 3A (UBE3A) results in Angelman syndrome, also a severe developmental disorder that shares some clinical features with RS. As MeCP2 regulates gene expression, this has led to the hypothesis that MeCP2 may regulate UBE3A expression; however, there are conflicting reports regarding the expression of Ube3a in MeCP2 null mutant mice. We have generated a novel MeCP2 mutant knock-in mouse with the mutation R168X, one of the most common mutations in patients with RS. These mice show features similar to RS, including hypoactivity, forelimb stereotypies, breathing irregularities, weight changes, hind limb atrophy, and scoliosis. The male mice experience early death. Analysis of Ube3a mRNA and protein levels in the Mecp2(R168X) male mice showed no significant difference in expression compared to their wild type littermates.
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PMID:Ube3a mRNA and protein expression are not decreased in Mecp2R168X mutant mice. 1793 29

Cestrum nocturnum is a garden shrub from the family Solanaceae and is used as a remedy for different health disorders. The aim of the present work was to investigate the potential neuropharmacological action profile of decoctions obtained from dry leaves of the plant. Decoctions were tested in different neuropharmacological models-Irwin test, exploratory behavior, tests for analgesia, isoniazid- and picrotoxin-induced convulsions, and maximal electroshock seizures-in mice, as well as in amphetamine-induced stereotypies and penicillin epileptic foci in rats. Decoctions of 1 and 5% (D1 and D5) induced restlessness, and the 30% decoction (D30) induced passivity. D5 and D30 reduced significantly exploratory behavior and amphetamine-induced stereotypies within a 3-hour observation period. The latter effect was apparent during the second 60 minutes. Decoctions reduced the amount of writhes induced by acetic acid in a dose-dependent manner, but were not effective in the hot plate model. The decoctions were not effective against pharmacologically induced convulsions. However, repeated administration of five doses of D5, at 1-hour intervals, reduced the amplitude of penicillin-induced epileptic spikes in both primary and secondary foci, in curarized rats. Taken together, the results suggest that C. nocturnum possesses active substances with analgesic activity provided through a peripheral action mechanism, in parallel with some psychoactive activity that does not fit well the neuropharmacological action profile of known reference neurotropic drugs.
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PMID:Behavioral and antiepileptic effects of acute administration of the extract of the plant Cestrum nocturnum Lin (lady of the night). 1827 93

Magnesium (Mg) has been proposed to take part in biochemical dysregulation contributing to psychiatric disorders. The aims of this study was to estimate acute behavioural responses to clonidine (0.1 mg/kg i.p.), d-amphetamine (5 mg/kg, i.p), arecoline (15 mg/kg i.p), nicotine (6 mg/kg i.p.), apomorphine (1.5 mg/kg i.p.) and L-5-hydroxytryptophan (300 mg/kg i.p.) in rats fed with Mg-deprivated diet for 49 days and then treated with organic and inorganic Mg salts (50 mg Mg per kg) ether alone or in combination with pyridoxine (5 mg vitamin B6 per kg). In our study Mg-deficient rats were more sensitive to d-amphetamine-induced motor stereotypes compared with control rats; time of onset of the stereotypies insignificantly decreased by 14.89% and duration of the stereotypies significantly increased by 19.44% (320.36 +/- 19.90 vs. 268.23 +/- 8.17 minutes; p = 0.043). Mg deficiency did not modulate sensitivity to nicotine-induced seizure. The time between nicotine injection and emergence of clonic seizure (seizure latency) in the controls and Mg-deficient rats were 0.80 +/- 0.26 and 0.96 +/- 0.21 minutes respectively. Duration of the seizures in the controls and Mg-deficient rats were 64.93 +/- 7.20 and 79.32 +/- 8.13 minutes. In our study, Mg deficiency did not affect on clonidine- and apomorphine-induced hypothermia. Clonidine produced similar decreases in rectal temperature in controls and Mg-deficient group. In experiments using apomorphine, values of hypothermia were similar to those observed with clonidine. Mg deficiency antagonized 5-hydroxytryptophan-induced head-twitch response. The number of head twitches produced by 5-hydroxytryptophan was significantly (p = 0.49) decreased: twofold in magnesium-deficient rats (1.23 +/- 0.44 per minute) as compared with controls (2.42 +/- 0.52 per minute). Arecoline-induced tremor was comparably less expressed in Mg-deficient rats than in controls. The time between arecoline injection and time of onset of the tremor in the controls and Mg-deficient rats were 92.75 +/- 19.35 and 245.17 +/- 121.86 seconds respectively (p < or = 0.035). Duration of the tremors in the controls and Mg-deficient rats were 1175.58 +/- 127.87 and 703.83 +/- 89.33 seconds (p = 0.015). Magnesium salts (Mg chloride, Mg L-aspartate alone and in combination with B6) were administered through gastric tube during twenty days up to complete compensation oferythrocyte and plasma Mg levels in all experimental groups. In our study administration of Mg salts resulted in normalization of acute behavioural responses in Mg-deficient rats to d-amphetamine, arecoline, and L-5-hydroxytryptophan. Behavioural responses in rats treated with both Mg chloride and Mg L-aspartate in combinations with B6 were comparable with those observed in MagneB6 treatment.
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PMID:[The characterization of central neuromediation in rats fed with magnesium-deprived diet before and after magnesium replenishment]. 1876 95

Mutations in the human X-linked cyclin-dependent kinase-like 5 (CDKL5) gene have been shown to cause infantile spasms as well as Rett syndrome (RTT)-like phenotype. To date, less than 25 different mutations have been reported. So far, there are still little data on the key clinical diagnosis criteria and on the natural history of CDKL5-associated encephalopathy. We screened the entire coding region of CDKL5 for mutations in 183 females with encephalopathy with early seizures by denaturing high liquid performance chromatography and direct sequencing, and we identified in 20 unrelated girls, 18 different mutations including 7 novel mutations. These mutations were identified in eight patients with encephalopathy with RTT-like features, five with infantile spasms and seven with encephalopathy with refractory epilepsy. Early epilepsy with normal interictal EEG and severe hypotonia are the key clinical features in identifying patients likely to have CDKL5 mutations. Our study also indicates that these patients clearly exhibit some RTT features such as deceleration of head growth, stereotypies and hand apraxia and that these RTT features become more evident in older and ambulatory patients. However, some RTT signs are clearly absent such as the so called RTT disease profile (period of nearly normal development followed by regression with loss of acquired fine finger skill in early childhood and characteristic intensive eye communication) and the characteristic evolution of the RTT electroencephalogram. Interestingly, in addition to the overall stereotypical symptomatology (age of onset and evolution of the disease) resulting from CDKL5 mutations, atypical forms of CDKL5-related conditions have also been observed. Our data suggest that phenotypic heterogeneity does not correlate with the nature or the position of the mutations or with the pattern of X-chromosome inactivation, but most probably with the functional transcriptional and/or translational consequences of CDKL5 mutations. In conclusion, our report show that search for mutations in CDKL5 is indicated in girls with early onset of a severe intractable seizure disorder or infantile spasms with severe hypotonia, and in girls with RTT-like phenotype and early onset seizures, though, in our cohort, mutations in CDKL5 account for about 10% of the girls affected by these disorders.
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PMID:Key clinical features to identify girls with CDKL5 mutations. 1879 Aug 21

Myoclonic jerks and myoclonic status (MS) are sometimes difficult to distinguish clinically from movement disorders such as hand stereotypies, tremor, and dystonia in Rett syndrome. We describe a rare and complete video-polygraphic study of a girl with Rett syndrome (MECP2 mutation) and MS misdiagnosed as movement disorders and disclosed after video-polygraphic recordings. Corresponding to closely recurring activity of diffuse spike and polyspikes-wave-type paroxysms, rhythmic and, especially, arrhythmic myoclonias, usually asymmetrical and asynchronous, involving mainly right muscle deltoid and rarely followed by an inhibitory phenomenon, appeared. The MS improved and, most importantly, disappeared after the use of levetiracetam, with an evident antimyoclonic efficacy and a marked improvement of daily life for the patient and her caregivers. The difficulty in differentiating some typical nonepileptic behavioral features and movement disorders of patients with Rett syndrome from seizures was overcome using prolonged video-polygraphic recordings in our case.
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PMID:Myoclonic status misdiagnosed as movement disorders in Rett syndrome: a video-polygraphic study. 1960 60


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