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)

A longitudinal study of 1553 infants, designed to provide early indicators of gross developmental problems by using a behavioral assessment scale, included 12 infants who later died suddenly and unexpectedly. In a retrospective examination of neonatal records, considerable evidence of central nervous system damage was found. Anoxic conditions and even possible seizure activity were implicated. Abnormalities of muscle tonus, skin color and cry were found, together with some visual problems. These findings on behavioral assessment in the neonatal period appear to identify a population which is at greater risk of sudden death in infancy. The need for oxygen therapy as a high-risk indicator of sudden unexpected death has been reported in a previous study and is further substantiated by the present findings: they are also compatible with thos of Naeye (1973), who found long-term hypoxic conditions in autopsy studies on the sudden infant death syndrome. It is suggested that the possibility of central nervous system involvement in the aetiology of the sudden infant death syndrome should be more thoroughly investigated.
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PMID:Central nervous system damage as a possible component of unexpected deaths in infancy. 95 12

The preceding discussion has consisted of a review of the technical and clinical aspects of pediatric multichannel recordings, which have become a widely used procedure in the clinical evaluation of infants with various apnea syndromes. It has been shown that multichannel recordings are superior to two-channel pneumocardiograms. Multichannel recordings should therefore be considered in all infants with unexplained episodes of apnea, bradycardia or cyanosis, in order to clarify the type of apnea and to rule out underlying conditions such as gastroesophageal reflux or seizures. The role of multichannel recording in predicting the risk of further apnea and SIDS, however, remains questionable. The clinical introduction of documented monitoring in the home setting with integrated pulse oximetry and a method for monitoring respiratory airflow might help to identify those infants at risk for apnea and SIDS in the future (see article by Weese-Mayer and Silvestri). Nevertheless, multichannel recordings in the hospital have provided a useful tool in the initial evaluation of many infants with infant apnea, and, for SIDS research, they have been useful for evaluating the complex autonomic control mechanisms during sleep and wakefulness.
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PMID:Multichannel polysomnographic recording for evaluation of infant apnea. 146 96

Cocaine abuse has become one of America's leading public health problems. Its use throughout pregnancy is associated with an increased risk of abruptio placentae, stillbirth, and preterm labor. Cocaine-associated neonatal complications include congenital malformations, decreased fetal growth, seizures, cerebral infarction and hemorrhage, auditory system deficits, sudden infant death syndrome, cardiac arrhythmias, necrotizing enterocolitis, and behavioral changes. Children followed throughout the first year of life continue to show developmental delay. Infants and children growing up in cocaine-abusing families are at risk for drug-related injuries. Accidental and intentional intoxication has occurred in infants and children from the smoke of freebase cocaine. The drug has also caused intoxication in breast-feeding infants. Adolescents experimenting with cocaine are at risk, with an apparently high frequency of seizures and loss of consciousness, as well as behavioral changes and psychosocial dysfunction.
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PMID:Cocaine: its effects on maternal and child health. 154 34

Sleep architecture derived from long-term polysomnographic recordings during the first year of life is characterized by clear developmental trends against a backdrop of variability. Variability is due to differences in state definitions and data collection and analysis strategies but probably also to an intrinsic characteristic of the maturing central nervous system (functional plasticity). Changes in sleep and wakefulness probably constitute nonspecific responses to a variety of stimuli. The variability has frustrated efforts to use specific features of sleep architecture for diagnostic or prognostic purposes. At present, polysomnographic studies of sleep architecture independent from EEG and cardiorespiratory studies are not indicated for diagnosing specific medical conditions or prognoses of good/adverse outcomes. For accurate interpretation for cardio-respiratory data, however, studies of sleep and wakefulness are indispensable. Furthermore, the study of neonatal seizures, in particular the coherence of state-defining variables or the evolution of sleep morphology, may benefit from attention to sleep architecture. Initial findings from some laboratories suggest that the very feature of excessive instability, which can be measured by repetitive long-term polysomnographic monitoring, signals a poor prognosis. In addition, fragmented sleep and the evolving interrelationship between ultradian and circadian rhythms may contain useful information that has yet to be mined. The advent of computer technologies can make the clinical laboratory into a setting where both research and clinical studies contribute to an elucidation of risk for sudden infant death syndrome and sequelae of neonatal seizures.
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PMID:Polysomnography in newborns and young infants: sleep architecture. 155 6

A study of 1000 consecutive autopsies of individuals dying of natural disease was conducted. Cardiovascular disease was responsible for 60.9% of all deaths with coronary artery disease--not only the main cause of cardiovascular death but also the main cause of all natural deaths--accounting for 45.1% of such cases. Diseases of the central nervous and respiratory systems accounted for 8.7 and 8.6%, respectively, of the natural deaths. Seizure disorders and pneumonia were the main causes of death in these organ systems. There were 124 deaths of children less than one year in age, 91 of which were due to sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). All of the SIDS deaths were in children less than 10 months old.
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PMID:Natural death as viewed by the medical examiner: a review of 1000 consecutive autopsies of individuals dying of natural disease. 200 67

Promethazine, available by prescription only since its introduction in 1946, has been widely used for pediatric patients because of its antihistaminic, antiemetic, and sedative properties. Recently, it's makers have sought Federal Drug Administration approval to introduce two liquid over the counter allergy/cold/cough products containing promethazine as an active ingredient. Although millions of doses have been administered, promethazine use has not been free of risk. Promethazine has been reported to cause significant sedation, agitation, hallucinations, seizures, dystonic reactions, and possibly apparent life-threatening events or sudden infant death syndrome. The impact of these relatively uncommon adverse reactions on children would be minimal if parents would use over the counter promethazine only for appropriate indications and only in children greater than 2 years of age. However, according to results of research evaluating the use of various over the counter medications by families for their children, promethazine will be used inappropriately. Both its over the counter status, implying a certain margin of safety, and its formulation as a syrup, providing ease of administration, should increase its use in all age groups including that by children less than 2 years of age who may be most vulnerable to the adverse reactions associated with the drug's use.
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PMID:Should promethazine in liquid form be available without prescription? 189 7

We reviewed the cases of 27 young children from 27 different families who were suffocated by their mothers. The certainty, or near certainty, of suffocation was based on reliable observation or recording of the suffocation, maternal confession, or successful prosecution in a criminal court. Eighteen of the children are alive, although one has severe brain damage; nine are dead. Twenty-four were reported to have had previous episodes of apnea, cyanosis, or seizure, and 11 had had 10 or more such episodes that were either invented or caused by the mother. Repetitive suffocation usually began between the ages of 1 and 3 months and continued until it was discovered, or the child died, 6 to 12 months later. The 27 children had 15 live elder siblings and 18 who had died suddenly and unexpectedly in early life; 13 of the dead siblings had had recurrent apnea, cyanosis, or seizures, and, although most of them at the time of death were certified as having sudden infant death syndrome, it is probable that some were suffocated. Repetitive suffocation has a characteristic clinical presentation that should allow identification before brain damage or death occurs. The characteristics should also allow the cause of death of some cases of sudden infant death to be established more accurately.
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PMID:Suffocation, recurrent apnea, and sudden infant death. 239 89

Between 1982 and 1985, 14 infants aged 3-26 weeks presented with severe hypoxic episodes as a result of the 'near miss' sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). They all had metabolic acidosis, cardiovascular instability, acute renal failure, ischaemic colitis, or acute neurological dysfunction. Investigation of the cause excluded infection and trauma, or a primary metabolic, pulmonary, cardiac, or seizure disorder. Seven infants were deeply comatose on admission, never regained consciousness, and died within 60 hours. A characteristic evolution of hypoxic-ischaemic encephalopathy not previously clearly described after near miss SIDS was seen in the seven who lived. Five of the seven were conscious within one hour of resuscitation and showed a striking interval of near normality before neurological deterioration that was characterised by status epilepticus, deep coma, and brain stem dysfunction from 36-96 hours after the event. A biphasic course was not apparent in the remaining two, each of whom was comatose on admission, though refractory seizures did develop. Computed tomograms of the brain more than a week after the event showed cortical infarction or cerebral atrophy. Six of the survivors, followed up from 16-55 months, have serious residual deficits including spastic quadriplegia, delayed development, cortical blindness, or infantile spasms.
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PMID:Hypoxic-ischaemic encephalopathy after near miss sudden infant death syndrome. 273 Jan 24

A light and electron microscopic study of Mg-deficient weanling rats showed structural changes of the lungs associated with the audiogenic seizure-shock episode, and with sudden, spontaneous death or spontaneous recovery after the shock episode. Pathogen-free weanling males were fed a Mg-deficient (Mg-0) or Mg-sufficient (Mg-100) diet and were raised in a gnotobiotic environment. Mg-100 rats (n = 16), unstressed or stressed with noise or strychnine, showed normal lungs. Mg-0 rats (n = 20) experienced audiogenic seizure-shock, followed by hyperventilation with tonic-clonic hyperextension of the back and extremities. The lungs of Mg-0 rats sacrificed during shock showed marked hemorrhage, including petechiae; edema; and atelectasis. Eight that died after a post-shock period of hyperventilation and hyperextension of the spine showed partial recovery of the pulmonary lesion; they showed well-expanded lungs, pleural petechiae, persistent congestion, with mild to moderate pathology. Mg-0 rats killed for study 2 days after the seizure-shock episode showed few small areas of residual lung pathology. Ultrastructural changes after Mg-O shock included aggregated platelets, leukocytes, and occasional reticulocytes in congested capillaries. Surfactant was disrupted during Mg-0 seizure-shock, but a layer closely applied to the surface of the epithelium was evident 2 days after shock. Mg-0 rats dying spontaneously showed nonspecific structural changes of the lung similar to changes reported in the sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS).
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PMID:Structural changes in lungs of magnesium-deficient weanling rats dying spontaneously or after spontaneous recovery from the seizure-shock episode. Possible methods for sudden infant death syndromes. 324 82

In order to establish criteria for early cerebral prognosis after acute cerebral hypoxic ischemic insult, we studied 31 cases of patients presenting, during their first year of life, cardio-respiratory arrests due to SIDS (21 cases), anesthesia (4 cases), other causes (6 cases). A favourable evolution was observed in 5 cases where coma lasted less than 8 hours. Conversely unfavorable evolution was seen in the 26 patients (21 deaths, 5 sequellae) where coma lasted more than 8 hours. Among 12 patients of this group surviving after the 4th day, 9 expressed seizures or status epilepticus. The poor evolution was correlated with hyperproteinorachia during the first 24 hours and with cortico-subcortical hypodensity on CT scan. Early EEG and transfontanellar echography seemed less useful to establish a prognosis, specifically to discriminate children surviving with and without sequelae.
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PMID:[Prognostic factors in cerebral hypoxic-ischemias in infants less than a year old]. 344 55


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