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

We observed a 16-month-old infant with residual brain damage following a heat stroke from being left in a parked automobile. In contrast with adults, in whom heat stroke usually follows strenuous exercise, the condition in infants usually results from excessive environmental temperature and/or dehydration. Early recognition of the illness is imperative. Three cardinal freatures are hot, dry skin, central nervous system disturbance, and hyperpyrexia. Immediate treatment should be aimed at improving circulation with volume expanders and rapid cooling. Other supportive measures may be necessary to control seizures, renal failure, hematologic abnormalities, or hepatic involvement.
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PMID:Heat stroke in infancy. 98 9

Despite adequate diagnostic evaluation and prolonged follow-up, the causes of epilepsy in the elderly patient frequently remain unknown. Some of these may be of occult, degenerative or vascular central nervous system disease origin--entities which are often difficult to incriminate specifically. Unquestionably, in a few cases, seizures occur at the time of the initial cerebrovascular accident, although in some patients seizures may follow such an episode after a latent interval, particularly when cortical motor areas have been damaged by the initial vascular insult. It is important to differentiate this group from those with recurrent vascular episodes, in whom diagnostic studies and treatment may differ. Brain tumour is as prominent a cause of seizures in the seventh decade as it is in younger adults, but probably is of lower incidence thereafter. Focal, clinical and electroencephalographic findings and a progressive clinical course are particularly common in this group. A heterogeneous group of causes, a few of which are liable to affect the ageing patient, are responsible for some of the seizures in old age and should be searched for when the etiology is obscure. Diagnostic studies will vary with the individual problem and, whenever possible, should be restricted to non-invasive studies such as electroencephalography and computer-assisted tomography, after initial baseline clinical assessment and laboratory studies have been performed. Contrast procedures such as angiography are sometimes hazardous to patients with atherosclerosis and should be reserved for selected patients. Treatment follows conventional guidelines with some modifications due to the vulnerability of the ageing patient to degenerative disease and complications of immobilization.
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PMID:Seizures after the age of sixty. 99 28

Two hundred eighty patients were admitted to an intensive care stroke unit over a one-year period. Subsequent investigation indicated that only 199 of these patients actually had cerebral ischemic or hemorrhagic lesions, 10 had other cerebrovascular lesions, and the remaining 71 patients had unrelated diseases, predominantly seizures. Detailed analysis of 103 stroke patients revealed an overall incidence of 59% hypertension, and 72% had hypertensive, ischemic or valvular heart disease. Fifty percent of the patients had various cardiac arrhythmias, some of which were responsible for the acute cerebrovascular lesion. Fourteen patients died during the acute phase, 11 from apparently irreversible cerebral selling, mainly due to cerebral hemorrhage. Secondary complications such as pneumonia, pulmonary embolism, pressure sores and urinary infection were almost nonexistent, but beneficial effects on the primary cerebral lesions were more difficult to demonstrate.
Stroke
PMID:Intensive care management of stroke patients. 100 32

The effects of short term cerebellar stimulation on integrative functions as measured by standardized psychological tests were studied. The patient group consisted of 12 epilepsy patients undergoing chronic cerebellar stimulation as treatment for intractable seizures. Three comparison groups included nonstimulated epilepsy patients, stimulated cerebral palsy patients, and stimulated stroke patients. Cerebellar stimulation resulted in some alterations in test performance. Improvements occurred from first to second test administration for both stimulated and nonstimulated subjects, as a probable practice effect. Short term stimulation of the cerebellar cortex does not result in apparent deficits. However, significant improvement in verbal output and in visual-motor performance occurred for the stimulated epilepsy group along with a small decrement in sustained concentration in a numerical task. Preliminary hypotheses were offered to explain the results.
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PMID:Psychological effects of short term cerebellar stimulation in epilepsy. 125 57

Seventy-eight patients with post-stroke seizures were studied retrospectively to determine the clinical, EEG and CT features of these seizures and their prognosis. There were 57 cerebral infarctions and 21 hemorrhages. Twenty-eight (36%) initial seizures occurred within one month after the stroke (0-24 hours in 19 cases) and were classified as early-onset seizures. Fifty (64%) initial seizures occurred more than 3 months after the stroke (3-12 months in 33 cases) and were classified as late-onset seizures. Compared with a population of 1938 strokes admitted during the same period, the proportion of patients with alcohol abuse, infarction in the anterior cerebral artery territory, watershed infarcts and lobar haemorrhages was significantly greater in our series. The proportion did not vary with the nature of the stroke (infarction or hemorrhage), except for early onset seizures in which the proportion of hemorrhages was significantly greater. Nor did it vary with the cause of hemispheric infarctions (cardioembolism or atherothrombosis or others). Ninety-five percent of the lesions affected the cerebral cortex or the subcortical white matter or both. Of all 78 initial seizures, 64% were partial motor (simple or secondarily generalized); 32% were primarily generalized, and 4% were partial not motor; status epilepticus was seen in 14% of the cases. An initial EEG, performed in 76 patients was normal in 7. Among the remaining 69 patients EEG showed focal or diffuse slowing down in 63% and epileptic features in 37% (including 10 cases of PLEDs). Early post-seizure EEG and repeated recordings significantly increased the specificity of EEG.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Epileptic crisis during and after cerebrovascular diseases. A clinical analysis of 78 cases]. 130 71

Although infantile spasms were initially described in 1841, remarkably little progress has been made in understanding the pathophysiology of this "peculiar form of infantile convulsions." Consequently, our ability to treat infantile spasms is limited. Infantile spasms are classified as a "generalized" seizure disorder in the international classification system, which suggests that the underlying brain abnormality causing the seizures also must be diffuse or generalized. As the classification suggests, there are many diffuse, or multifocal, brain disorders related to infantile spasms, e.g., inborn errors of metabolism, hypoxic-ischemic brain injury, and developmental brain defects such as tuberous sclerosis or Aicardi's syndrome. On the other hand, infantile spasms have been reported in which a localized brain abnormality was present, e.g., tumor, stroke, and trauma. On rare occasions, removal of a tumor has resulted in cessation of the generalized infantile spasms. This finding suggests that focal cortical abnormalities can cause infantile spasms and that removing the abnormality can stop the seizures. At University of California, Los Angeles, the Pediatric Epilepsy Surgery Program has developed new approaches to the treatment of infantile spasms. The principal underlying concepts are (a) children with medically refractory infantile spasms may have an area of cortical defect (called the zone of cortical abnormality) that causes the seizures and (b) infantile spasms are usually generalized seizures. Thus, the goal of the surgical assessment is not the identification of the focus of seizure onset but rather the identification of the zone of cortical abnormality.
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PMID:Treatment of infantile spasms: medical or surgical? 133 May 8

Drugs, either self-administered or prescribed by physicians, can result in substantial neurologic disability in psychiatric patients. It is clear that the use of neuroleptic agents to treat psychiatric illness may result in a variety of tardive movement disorders. Most commonly, these take the form of orobuccal dyskinesias, but choreic movements of the trunk and extremities, dystonic postures, myoclonus, tics, parkinsonism, and akathisic syndromes also may occur. The choreic tardive syndromes are thought to occur more commonly in the elderly female population, but tardive variants may affect a different population. The neuroleptic malignant syndrome carries a significant mortality and remains a diagnostic and therapeutic challenge. Early detection and vigorous treatment reduces the morbidity and mortality from this condition. Stroke, seizures, and various movement disorders may complicate the illicit use of cocaine and complicate the rehabilitation of those patients dependent on its use. The unsatisfactory treatment of tardive syndromes, neuroleptic malignant syndrome, and cocaine-induced neurologic disease underscores our incomplete understanding of the neurochemistry of dopamine, the function of newly discovered dopamine receptors, and the role they play in maintaining normal emotional and motoric function. For now, awareness of the varied neurologic syndromes related to neurotransmitter-modulating agents should provide the impetus for careful use of these agents and for the continued development of improved drugs for the treatment of psychiatric disease.
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PMID:Neurologic complications of drugs. Tardive dyskinesias, neuroleptic malignant syndrome, and cocaine-related syndromes. 135 Dec 85

The effects of alcohol on the central nervous system can be subdivided into three main categories: the effects of acute intoxication (drunkenness, acute encephalopathy, stroke), the effects of tolerance and ethanol withdrawal (delirium tremens, seizures) and the delayed manifestations of chronic alcohol consumption (cerebellar degeneration, Wernicke's encephalopathy, dementia).
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PMID:[Main involvement of the central nervous system in alcoholism]. 141 Sep 80

We describe the full history and postmortem findings in one of the first identified cases of mitochondrial encephalomyopathy with stroke-like episodes (MELAS). To clarify diagnostic criteria, we analyzed 69 reported cases. The syndrome should be suspected by the following three invariant criteria: (1) stroke-like episode before age 40 yr; (2) encephalopathy characterized by seizures, dementia, or both; and (3) lactic acidosis, ragged-red fibers (RRF), or both. The diagnosis may be considered secure if there are also at least two of the following: normal early development, recurrent headache, or recurrent vomiting. There are incomplete syndromes in relatives of patients with the full syndrome and incomplete syndromes might also be encountered in sporadic cases. Some MELAS patients have features of the Kearns-Sayre syndrome (KSS) or myoclonic epilepsy with ragged-red fibers (MERRF), but none had the full KSS syndrome. In partial or confusing cases, analysis of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) may point to the correct diagnosis; however, not all patients with clinical MELAS have had the typical mtDNA point mutation and some patients with the mutation have clinical syndromes other than MELAS.
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PMID:Melas: an original case and clinical criteria for diagnosis. 142

The association of ischemic cerebrovascular lesions with livedo reticularis is known as Sneddon syndrome. It affects young subjects, primarily women, and its neurological manifestations are TIAs, ischemic stroke, progressive dementia and epileptic seizures. Its etiopathogenesis has still to be clarified. Some authors have associated it with an antiphospholipid antibody syndrome. Recently it has been assumed that a defect in blood coagulation may be involved in its pathogenesis. Here we report a case in which both an increase in coagulation factor VII activity and a deficiency in free protein S were documented.
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PMID:Cerebral ischemia and livedo reticularis in a patient with impairment of coagulation factor VII and free protein S. 142 96


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