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

The role of endogenous opioids in aerobic fitness-induced decrements in cardiovascular stress reactivity was examined by comparing the effects of opioid antagonism with naltrexone on responses to stress in young adults with high versus low levels of aerobic fitness. Two hundred forty subjects were given an activity questionnaire and males with the highest (Fit) and lowest (Nonfit) aerobic activity profiles were recruited for maximal oxygen consumption (VO2max) treadmill testing and psychological stress testing (final sample N = 28). Heart rate and blood pressures were measured during performance on a computer-controlled arithmetic task after pretreatment with either naltrexone (Trexan, DuPont) or a placebo. During placebo challenges, Fit subjects, compared with Nonfit, showed lower heart rate reactivity during stress and lower mean arterial blood pressures immediately before and during recovery from stress. Naltrexone eliminated these reactivity differences by increasing heart rate reactivity and raising mean arterial blood pressure in Fit subjects. These data suggest that aerobic fitness is associated with enhanced opioidergic inhibition of circulatory stress reactivity. Opioidergic modulatory effects on stress reactivity may comprise an important mechanism in fitness-associated risk reduction for cardiovascular disease.
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PMID:Aerobic fitness and opioidergic inhibition of cardiovascular stress reactivity. 133 71

A 33 year-old-man presented recurrent syncopal episodes after venipuncture. This was sometimes associated with seizure. It was also noted that the syncope was aroused by mental stress. The patient was admitted to the department of neurological medicine because of epilepsy. Cardiac arrest of more than 15 seconds was detected during the venipuncture-prooshed syncope test. He had normal routine testing, holter monitoring, head CT scan, carotid sinus massage, valsalva maneuver etc. The syncope was similar to a malignant vasovagal one which has no typical warning signs. He had recurrent syncopal episodes without typical prodrome. Therefore a DDD pacemaker was implanted. It has not been completely established as effective in the treatment of vasovagal syncope, but for the treatment of syncope involving cardioinhibitory action, dual chamber pacing in considered as the main treatment available.
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PMID:[A case of vasovagal syncope associated with venipuncture]. 152 81

Among the very few diseases that can be traced back to ancient times none has stimulated human phantasy as much as epilepsy, and the many names given to epilepsy reflects the different trends of thinking on the topic over the past two and a half thousand years. The ancient Greek believed epilepsy to be a sacred disease with the body being invaded by a God. The view that demons and evil spirits rather than Gods were responsible for the disease prevailed throughout the middle ages, influenced by Christian thinking. This led people with epilepsy to be treated, as the mentally ill, with contempt and pity. Up to the latter half of the 19th century epilepsy remained an integral part of psychiatry. The concept of the epileptic personality, stating that the behaviour and consequently the seizures themselves came from a constitutional hereditary psychopathic make-up, was deeply entrenched. The process of distinguishing epilepsy from insanity began with the development of neurology as a new and independent discipline, helped by the discovery of electroencephalography EEG and potent antiepileptic drugs. It became more widely accepted that most epileptic patients have normal mental states. It was argued that the psychiatric consequences of having epilepsy depended on the existence of pathological brain lesions, side-effects of inadequate drugs and the psychological stress of living with a chronic and debilitating disease.
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PMID:[The mind and epilepsy: opinions and viewpoints over the course of time]. 267 62

Common behavioral alterations associated with epilepsy include increased interest in philosophical and religious concerns, increased and extensive writing of a cosmic or philosophical nature, changes in sexual behavior, and aggressiveness. Psychological stress, the effects of anticonvulsant therapy, and the actual occurrence of seizures or convulsions can be ruled out as possible causes of the syndrome. It is speculated that these behavioral alterations are the result of an intermittent spike focus in the temporal lobe that leads to an alteration in the responsiveness of the limbic system. Thus, there is a heightened emotional response to many stimuli as well as a decrease in sexual responsiveness. In an effort to discover the cause of the high incidence of sexual alterations, abnormalities in response to luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) were found in a group of patients with partial complex seizures, some of whom had no overt sexual dysfunction and had never received anticonvulsant therapy.
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PMID:Interictal behavioral changes in epilepsy. 661 94

The cases of 5 patients with seizures occurring the day of or shortly before their weddings are presented. Major life events may precipitate or exacerbate epileptic or nonepileptic seizures as a result of 1) missed medications, 2) sleep deprivation, 3) alcohol or concomitant medications, 4) hyperventilation, or 5) the emotional state directly or stress indirectly. Seizures occurring at times of psychological stress may be either neurological or psychiatric in origin. The physician treating patients with a new onset or exacerbation of seizures around a major life event must consider all of these factors in the evaluation.
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PMID:Prenuptial seizures: a report of five cases. 771 96

Pediatric intensive care units use sophisticated medical technology and are staffed by deeply committed nurses who are subjected to significant psychological stress. This stress varies with the type of patient and influences the style and quality of care. With this respect, children and adolescents admitted after a suicidal attempt are considered catalysts. However, there have been no systematic studies of how pediatric intensive care nurses respond emotionally to their interactions with these patients. This epidemiological study conducted in five Parisian Teaching Hospital pediatric intensive care units used a specially designed questionnaire to evaluate nurses' responses on the basis of style of care. Children under 16 years of age admitted after attempted suicide were studied comparatively with same age children admitted for status asthmaticus or encephalopathy with seizures. Results highlighted the differences in nurses' psychological responses to these situations and their difficulties in interacting with patients. This study provides strict methodological guidelines for investigating an issue often discussed emotionally or on the basis of anecdotal data.
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PMID:[A prospective study on the behavior of pediatric intensive care unit nurses, concerning the care given to suicidal children]. 823 7

Fifteen patients with epilepsy and hypergraphia were compared with 32 patients with epilepsy but without hypergraphia. The number of previous psychiatric episodes, the number of Washington Psychosocial Seizure Inventory (WPSI) items indicating emotional maladjustment, and the number of CT scan abnormalities were significantly greater in the hypergraphic patients than in the non-hypergraphic patients. Cognitive performance, EEG laterality and the scores of WPSI items related to the psychological stress of seizures did not differ significantly between the two groups. Hypergraphia reflects changes in emotional responsiveness secondary to organic temporal lobe lesions.
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PMID:A clinical study of hypergraphia in epilepsy. 850 51

The cases of two young patients with repetitive syncopal attacks due to idiopathic long QT syndrome (ILQTS) are reported. Both had been primarily misdiagnosed for seizures. In one of the cases the QT interval in the ECG at rest was normal. The same patient had a previous episode of cardiac arrest with ventricular fibrillation. The treadmill stress test was of great value, revealing polymorphic ventricular tachycardia induced by exercise, and evaluating the efficacy of beta-blocking therapy in the follow-up. The ILQTS should be considered a possible etiology in any patient presenting with new onset seizures, especially in the young. The treatments were different in both cases. In the first one, the treatment with nadolol (100 mg od) revealed to be very effective with total remission of symptoms. The treadmill stress test performed 15 days after the beginning of treatment did not show any ventricular arrhythmias, and it was assumed that the patient was effectively protected against ventricular arrhythmias. After 4.5 months of follow up, no syncopal episodes occurred. In the second case due to young age, the frequency, and the severity of the attacks (cardiac arrest with ventricular fibrillation), and the inefficacy of beta-adrenergic-blocking agents, the implantable cardioversor-defibrillator was the treatment chosen, although the beta blocking therapy was maintained to reduce the number of arrhythmic events. The ILQTS is a rare anomaly related to sudden cardiac death. The ILQTS is characterised by the association of several distinctive electrocardiographic features, among which prolongation of the QT interval is the best known. Life-threatening arrhythmia occurs usually under conditions of physical or psychological stress. Relatively effective therapies do exist and are represented by antiadrenergic interventions: beta-adrenergic-blocking agents are the treatment of choice. When they fail, left sympathetic denervation or the automatic implantable cardioversor-defibrillator have also proved to be effective.
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PMID:[Exertion syncopal crisis in the young, associated with idiopathic long QT syndrome]. 870 3

We evaluated self-perception of seizure precipitants in 149 adult subjects with epilepsy: 71% of the subjects reported at least one factor that, according to the perception, increased the risk of suffering from a seizure. The subjects most often reported psychological stress, change of weather and sleep deprivation. Among the disease-related factors, seizure frequency and the state of consciousness at the onset of the seizures influenced perception of precipitants. Furthermore the perception of some precipitants was dependent on such social variables as rural versus urban surroundings. It is argued that the perception of seizure precipitants is the result of a combination of physiologically based temporal and causal correlations and of beliefs of the patient about such relationships. Hence reports of seizure precipitants are determined by somatic as well as psychological factors. Efforts to clarify the relationship between possible precipitants and the occurrence of seizures should be intensified. In addition the great importance of seizure precipitants in lay theories of epilepsies should be considered in counselling patients with epilepsies.
Seizure 1998 Oct
PMID:Subjective perception of seizure precipitants: results of a questionnaire study. 980 15

Stress reactivity was assessed in aerobically fit (n = 14) and unfit (n = 8) females during the follicular phase of the menstrual cycle. Participants completed the Spielberger State-Trait Anxiety Inventory and provided a urine sample for catecholamine analysis before and after mental stress testing, Stroop Color-Word Test. Blood pressure, heart rate, muscle tension, and skin conductance were measured during mental stress testing. Fit and unfit participants differed significantly in baseline heart rate but not in stress reactivity or in state or trait anxiety. These data suggest that aerobic fitness does not attenuate the stress response in women prior to menopause.
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PMID:Effect of aerobic fitness on the physiological stress response in women. 1122 97


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