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

Epidermal nevus syndrome is one of the sporadic congenital hamartoses in which neurologic abnormalities have been frequently reported. We report two cases with severe primary brain involvement, seizures, mental retardation, and facial hemihypertrophy. We emphasize the superiority of magnetic resonance imaging over other radiographic studies in outlining the primary central nervous system anomalies associated with this syndrome. Although attempts were made to distinguish between several variants of epidermal nevus syndrome, it is clear that these are one entity. Proteus syndrome, encephalocraniocutaneous lipomatosis, and epidermal nevus syndrome have several overlapping phenotypic features. We suggest that they represent a phenotypic continuum, which in turn suggests a common pathogenetic process. While the cause of these syndromes is unknown, observations point to a somatic mutation leading to variable patterns of mosaicism.
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PMID:Epidermal nevus syndrome: subgroup with neuronal migration defects. 155 48

A patient with Proteus syndrome is reported. He had hemihypertrophy, bilateral hypertrophy of the third fingers, skin anomalies, and varicosities, as well as mental retardation, seizures resistant to anticonvulsant treatment, and a very severe course with death at the age of 2 years.
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PMID:Proteus syndrome: report of a case with severe brain impairment and fatal course. 235 6

Proteus syndrome is a rare hamartomatous syndrome with a variety of abnormalities. A 6-year-old Japanese boy without apparent abnormalities at birth developed by 1 year of age cerebriform skin tumors on the right sole, soft masses on the left sole, palms and fingers, brownish verrucous lesions and whorled brownish patches on the right side of the neck, chest, external genitals and extremities, hemihypertrophy of the right lower extremity, lordoscoliosis, protuberance of the skull, epileptic seizures, hydrocephalus and mental retardation. This patient appears to be the second Japanese case of Proteus syndrome.
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PMID:Proteus syndrome. 787 27

We report the radiological appearances of 5 children with hemimegalencephaly. There are few reports of this rare condition in the radiological literature. Two of the children have hemimegalencephaly as an isolated finding while the other three have Proteus syndrome. Four children have seizures which commenced within the first 6 months of life and two of these subsequently required hemispherectomy. In addition to the typical radiological features of hemimegalencephaly there was a high incidence of other brain anomalies. These include hypoplasia of the corpus callosum and crus cerebri, grey and white matter calcification and cortical migration/organisational disorders.
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PMID:The radiological features of hemimegalencephaly including three cases associated with proteus syndrome. 796 96

I report 2 unusual cases of Proteus syndrome that support the concept of somatic mosaicism. In one patient, a huge connective tissue nevus covered the chest and abdomen and hyperostoses of the calvaria were observed. In the other patient, linear verrucous epidermal nevi, epibulbar dermoids, and hyperostoses were found. No enlargement of the limbs or digits occurred and the plantar surfaces of the feet were normal. Selective aspects of Proteus syndrome not previously reviewed are also presented including: uncommon neoplasms; pulmonary and renal abnormalities; brain malformations; facial phenotype associated with seizures and severe mental deficiency; and types of abnormal growth in the craniofacial skeleton.
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PMID:Proteus syndrome: clinical evidence for somatic mosaicism and selective review. 1044 40

Proteus syndrome, described for the first time in 1979, is a sporadic congenital poly-malformation syndrome named for its highly variable manifestations. We report the case of a 36-year-old male patient with several malformations including skull hyperostosis and huge frontal sinus hypertrophy compressing the brain. He complained of increasing headache for 5 years. Cerebrospinal fluid pressure monitoring revealed severe hypertension. The patient underwent frontoparietal craniectomy, which allowed partial decompression. Postoperatively headaches decreased and the intracranial pressure normalized. Proteus syndrome is a genetic disease with a mosaic pattern. Only a hundred cases have been reported, mostly in childhood. Common manifestations include disproportionate overgrowth of the limbs and the skull, various subcutaneous tumors, vascular, renal and pulmonary malformations. Brain abnormalities are not common in this syndrome. When present, retardation or seizure disorders are typically seen. Intracranial hypertension is described for the first time in this syndrome.
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PMID:[Intracranial hypertension in Proteus syndrome]. 1770 28

The authors report two cases of Brazilian children with most of the common syndromic features of Proteus syndrome, such as asymmetric overgrowth of tissues, skin abnormalities, hypotonia and mental retardation. In both patients, a refractory epilepsy, compatible with Ohtahara syndrome, as well as hemimegalencephaly, with asymmetric distribution of facial fat, were also diagnosed.
Seizure 2008 Jun
PMID:Proteus syndrome associated with hemimegalencephaly and Ohtahara syndrome: report of two cases. 1808 31

A newborn girl was found to have a massive lymphatic truncal vascular malformation with overlying cutaneous venous anomaly associated with overgrown feet and splayed toes. These manifestations comprise the recently described CLOVE syndrome. She also had cranial asymmetry and developed generalized seizures, which were treated with anticonvulsants. Cranial CT showed encephalomalacia, widening of the ventricles and the sulci, hemimegalencephaly (predominantly white matter) and partial agenesis of corpus callosum. Review of the literature identified several other patients with CLOVE syndrome, some of whom were misdiagnosed as having Proteus syndrome, with strikingly similar manifestations. We conclude that CNS manifestations including hemimegalencephaly, dysgenesis of the corpus callosum, neuronal migration defects, and the consequent seizures, may be an rarely recognized manifestation of CLOVE syndrome.
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PMID:Congenital lipomatous overgrowth, vascular malformations, and epidermal nevi (CLOVE) syndrome: CNS malformations and seizures may be a component of this disorder. 1916 Nov 49

Proteus syndrome is caused by an activating AKT1 mutation (c.49G>A, p.Glu17Lys). Many variable features are possible in this mosaic disorder, including: (i) disproportionate, asymmetric, and distorting overgrowth; (ii) bone abnormalities different from those observed in other disorders; (iii) a characteristic cerebriform connective tissue nevus made up of highly collagenized connective tissue; (iv) epidermal nevi in early life, consisting of acanthosis and hyperkeratosis; (v) vascular malformations of the capillary, venous, or lymphatic types; (vi) dysregulated adipose tissue including lipomas, lipohypoplasia, fatty overgrowth, and localized fat deposits; (vii) other unusual features, including bullous lung alterations; specific neoplasms; a facial phenotype associated with intellectual disability and/or seizures, and/or brain malformations; and (viii) deep vein thrombosis, resulting in premature death. Concluding remarks address diagnostic criteria, natural history, management, psychosocial issues, and differential diagnosis.
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PMID:Proteus syndrome review: molecular, clinical, and pathologic features. 2399 99

The term epidermal nevus syndrome (ENS) has been used to describe the association of epidermal hamartomas and extracutaneous abnormalities. Although many continue to use the term "ENS," it is now understood that this is not one disease, but rather a heterogeneous group with distinct genetic profiles defined by a common cutaneous phenotype: the presence of epidermal and adnexal hamartomas that are associated with other organ system involvement. One commonality is that epidermal nevi often follow the lines of Blaschko and it appears the more widespread the cutaneous manifestations, the greater the risk for extracutaneous manifestations. The majority of the extracutaneous manifestations involve the brain, eye, and skeletal systems. The CNS involvement is wide ranging and involves both clinical manifestations such as intellectual disability and seizures, as well as structural anomalies. Several subsets of ENS with characteristic features have been delineated including the nevus sebaceus syndrome, Proteus syndrome, CHILD syndrome, Becker's nevus syndrome, nevus comedonicus syndrome, and phakomatosis pigmentokeratotica. Advances in molecular biology have revealed that the manifestations of ENS are due to genomic mosaicism. It is likely that the varied clinical manifestations of ENS are due in great part to the functional effects of specific genetic defects. Optimal management of the patient with ENS involves an interdisciplinary approach given the potential for multisystem involvement. Of note, epidermal nevi have been associated with both benign and malignant neoplasms, and thus ongoing clinical follow-up is required.
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PMID:Epidermal nevus syndromes. 2656 89


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