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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (
seizures
)
80,221
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A retrospective study of the neurological problems arising in HIV-I seropositive patients in a single defined geographical area was undertaken. Ninety patients were referred for a neurological opinion from a total known HIV-I seropositive population of 436. Minor problems were frequently encountered early in the course of disease (20 at CDC stage II, 12 at CDC stage III), including
seizures
related to drug abuse in six. The most frequent neurological problem in those patients in CDC group IV (58 patients) were the AIDS dementia complex (14 patients), an axonal sensorimotor neuropathy (12), toxoplasmosis (nine) and
cryptococcal meningitis
(three). All patients with a structural lesion had appropriate focal signs on examination. The value and role of CT cranial scanning in the diagnosis of toxoplasmosis is discussed and the importance of recognizing potentially treatable causes of both intellectual impairment and cytomegalovirus-related neuropathies is stressed. This is the first report of an unselected series of patients at all stages of HIV-I related neurological disease from a single UK centre.
...
PMID:The neurological features of HIV-positive patients in Glasgow--a retrospective study of 90 cases. 132 56
Nervous system opportunistic infections are seen in about one fifth of AIDS cases and account for over 40% of the patients with neurological manifestations. Serious infections are seen in severely immunosuppressed patients, usually with CD4 counts of 200 ml-1 or less. The commonest is CMV, which can produce acute encephalitis, sometimes with focal hemisphere or brain-stem signs, dementia, retinitis, optic neuritis and an ascending radiculomyeloencephalitis.
Cryptococcal meningitis
is the most frequent fungal disease; a high degree of clinical suspicion is required in patients with fever, malaise, headache or
seizures
. Only CSF cultures are always positive; both serum and CSF cryptococcal antigen tests are highly sensitive and specific. Treatment with amphotericin B and flucytosine is successful in at least 70% of first episodes but side-effects are common. Without maintenance therapy 50% of patients relapse; fluconazole is recommended. Cerebral toxoplasmosis can present with focal cerebral or spinal cord signs but also as a diffuse encephalopathy; negative T. gondii serology is exceptional but positive serum titres are usually unhelpful. Treatment with sulfadiazine, pyrimethamine and folinic acid achieves good results in 90% of the first episodes, but side-effects are common. Appearances on CT scan or MRI may take several weeks to improve. The value of an empirical approach to treatment is well-established; an initial cerebral biopsy is difficult to justify. Without maintenance therapy a relapse rate of 50% can be expected; therapy with sulfadiazine and pyrimethamine may also prevent pneumocystosis. HIV disease appears to increase the likelihood of neurosyphilis, and the risk of relapse after conventional penicillin doses, in patients with syphilis; at least 3-4 weeks of appropriate therapy are recommended. A number of other diseases caused by viruses, fungi, bacteria and parasites are less common; these include progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy, herpes simplex and zoster infections and tuberculosis.
...
PMID:Central nervous system opportunistic infections in HIV disease: clinical aspects. 134 47
HIV-1-related neurological diseases, excluding opportunistic infections and HIV encephalitis, are considered here. Most occur in severely immunosuppressed patients, with CD4 counts of under 200 x 10(6) l-1. Primary brain lymphoma and metastases from systemic non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, the second commonest cause of cerebral mass lesions in AIDS, are usually aggressive B cell tumours. Their poor median survival after treatment, compared with that of lymphomas in non-AIDS patients, seems related to systemic complications, particularly opportunistic infections. Kaposi's sarcoma produces neurological symptoms exceptionally. Cerebral infarction is often unrecognized clinically but large vessel arteritic occlusions may occur. Intracranial haemorrhages occur mostly in thrombocytopenic patients.
Seizures
are frequently referred to the neurologist; investigation may lead to a diagnosis of AIDS. Nearly 50% of patients with
seizures
have cerebral toxoplasmosis or
cryptococcal meningitis
; HIV-1 encephalitis is presumed to be the cause in 30%. A subacute or chronic vacuolar myelopathy with pyramidal and posterior column signs is the commonest form of spinal cord involvement in AIDS; its cause remains unknown. Peripheral nerve syndromes occur at all stages of HIV-1 infection. Distal symmetrical peripheral neuropathies are the most frequent, particularly a painful form with axonal atrophy, associated with CMV infection, and seen during ARC or AIDS. Mononeuritis multiplex due to vasculitis, CMV, or lymphoma and a serious lumbosacral polyradiculopathy due to CMV are infrequent. The commonest myopathy is due to zidovudine (AZT); it usually responds to drug withdrawal. The nature, prognosis and optimal management of most other myopathies is yet to be determined.
...
PMID:Other neurological diseases in HIV-1 infection: clinical aspects. 134 49
A prospective study of the neurological manifestations in all patients with systemic lupus erythematous (SLE) was conducted between February 1985 to January 1989. Excluding herpes zoster infection of peripheral or cranial nerves, post-herpetic neuralgia and migraine, 36 neurological episodes occurred in 33 patients. The presenting symptoms were mental confusion (10), psychosis (five),
seizures
(six), focal neurological deficit (three), coma (two), headache (five), blurring of vision (three), neuropathy (one) and myelopathy (one). Of these manifestations, only eight episodes were due to primary involvement by SLE: psychosis (two),
seizure
(two), multiple cerebral infarcts (one), papillitis (one), neuropathy (one) and myelopathy (one). Infection was the most common secondary cause of neurological episodes: all 10 episodes of mental confusion (fungal seven, pyogenic two, tuberculous one, nocardial one); two of six
seizures
(tuberculous one, pyogenic one); all five headaches (tuberculous meningitis three,
cryptococcal meningitis
two). The other secondary causes included steroid psychosis (two), hypertensive encephalopathy with
seizure
(one) and hypertensive retinopathy (one). Three of five cases of focal neurological deficit were due to macrovascular disease rather than to vasculitic infarction. We concluded that cerebral psychosis was a relatively rare presentation in our patients with SLE. In patients who presented with a neurological problem, especially mental confusion, efforts should be made to ascertain the underlying cause, especially if this may be an infection.
...
PMID:Neurological manifestations of systemic lupus erythematosus: a prospective study. 180 Oct 58
Among 630 patients with human immunodeficiency virus infection, 70 patients with new-onset
seizures
were studied. Generalized seizures occurred in 66 patients (94%): they occurred as the initial
seizure
in 56 patients (80%) and during follow-up in another 10 patients (14%). Partial seizures (18 patients), status epilepticus (10 patients), and recurrent
seizures
(38 patients) were also noted. Identified processes included cerebral toxoplasmosis in 11 patients, cerebral lymphoma in 8, metabolic derangement in 8,
cryptococcal meningitis
in 7, and vascular infarction in 4. In 32 patients (46%)
seizures
were not associated with identifiable brain lesions and were believed to result from human immunodeficiency virus cerebral infection. Phenytoin treatment was associated with adverse drug reactions in 16 of 62 patients who received it. Our results suggest that the majority of patients with human immunodeficiency virus and
seizures
do not have secondary focal brain lesions as the cause of the
seizures
and that human immunodeficiency virus infection alone can, and often does, cause
seizures
.
...
PMID:Seizures in human immunodeficiency virus infection. 234 90
A 34-year-old homosexual male developed
cryptococcal meningitis
as the initial manifestation of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS). With antifungal therapy he improved. Six weeks later he developed focal motor
seizures
and progressive hemiplegia. Computer assisted tomography revealed multiple, ring-enhancing, low density lesions. The patient expired and at necropsy he was found to have multiple toxoplasma brain abscesses as well as chronic
cryptococcal meningitis
. This case demonstrates that in a patient with AIDS with pre-existing central nervous system infection who develops new neurological symptoms the possibility of a second and potentially treatable infection must be considered and its diagnosis pursued vigorously.
...
PMID:Cryptococcal meningitis and cerebral toxoplasmosis in a patient with acquired immune deficiency syndrome. 395 46
DNA amplification of three Mycobacterium tuberculosis-specific DNA sequences by the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) were evaluated as a means for rapid diagnosis of tuberculous meningitis (TBM). The DNA sequences amplified were a 123 bp region of the IS6110 insertion elements which occur in multiple copies in the mycobacterial genome, a 240 bp region (nts 460-700) from the MPB 64 protein coding gene, and the 383 bp region of the 65 kDa heat shock protein (HSP) antigen. Twenty-seven cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) specimens were studied. Six were obtained from patients with TBM diagnosed by culture (4/6) or by the patients' response to anti-tuberculous therapy (2/6). The remaining 21 specimens were obtained from patients with febrile
seizures
(3/21), aseptic meningitis (3/21), septic meningitis (14/21), and
cryptococcal meningitis
(1/21), and these served as negative controls. Our results indicate that although the protocols involving the 3 DNA sequences were able to detect TB DNA in the 6 TBM specimens, the main drawback was their extreme sensitivity, thus giving rise to false positive results. In particular, the repeat copy sequence, IS6110, and the 65 kDa HSP gave unacceptably large numbers of false positive results (62% and 33%, respectively).
...
PMID:DNA amplification by the polymerase chain reaction for the rapid diagnosis of tuberculous meningitis. Comparison of protocols involving three mycobacterial DNA sequences, IS6110, 65 kDa antigen, and MPB64. 806 10
Seventy-one patients with
cryptococcal meningitis
, 46 males and 25 females, aged 15-83 years, were included in this study. Their initial clinical manifestations, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) features, and therapeutic results were analysed. Patients were treated with three different regimens: amphotericin B, fluconazole, and combination therapy. Based on the therapeutic results, the 71 patients were also divided into cured, improved, and failed groups. For statistical comparison, the clinical manifestations and CSF features, were compared according to therapeutic outcome. There was no statistical difference in outcome among the three different antifungal regimens. However, patients treated with fluconazole required 36% fewer days of hospitalization compared with those receiving amphotericin B. Significant prognostic factors, included low CSF glucose, high CSF lactate, high CSF cryptococcal antigen titre (> or = 1:1024), initial level of consciousness, the presence of
seizure
, hydrocephalus, and central nervous system vasculitis. Multiple logistic regression analysis showed that only initial level of consciousness, and CSF antigen titre were strongly associated with therapeutic failure after other potentially confounding factors were adjusted for. Because some of the prognostic factors in
cryptococcal meningitis
can be corrected, early diagnosis, early use of appropriate antifungal treatment, and the correction of the underlying metabolic derangements are important in management.
...
PMID:The prognostic factors of cryptococcal meningitis in HIV-negative patients. 1046 45
New-onset
seizures
are frequent manifestations of central nervous system disorders in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).
Seizures
are more common in advanced stages of the disease, although they may occur early in the course of illness. In the majority of patients,
seizures
are of the generalised type. Status epilepticus is also frequent. Associated metabolic abnormalities increase the risk for status epilepticus. Cerebral mass lesions,
cryptococcal meningitis
, and HIV-encephalopathy are common causes of
seizures
. Phenytoin is the most commonly prescribed anticonvulsant in this situation, although several patients may experience hypersensitivity reactions. The prognosis of
seizure
disorders in HIV-infected patients depends upon the underlying cause.
...
PMID:HIV infection and seizures. 1090 91
Two cases of
cryptococcal meningitis
and increased intracranial pressure in patients with acquired immunodeficiency are described. Both patients presented high intracranial pressure that persisted despite optimal antifungal treatment (amphotericin B, 5-flucytosine initially, and fluconazole posteriorly). The elevated intracranial pressure produced headache,
seizures
, and reduced visual and auditory acuity. CAT scan demonstrated absence of ventricular dilatation or focal lesions. Both cases were treated with adequate antifungal therapy, as well as with repeated lumbar punctures and placement of a lumboperitoneal shunt due to the persistence of elevated intracranial pressure. One patient presented with unilateral loss of vision due to optic nerve atrophy. After one year of follow-up, one patient died due to progression of his disease, while the other is still alive and without evidence of neurological disease. Intracranial hypertension is a frequent clinical manifestation of
cryptococcal meningitis
in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) that requires adequate diagnosis and management. Treatment should be directed towards the reduction of intracranial pressure though repeated lumbar punctures and, in some cases, with lumboperitoneal or ventricular-peritoneal shunts.
...
PMID:[Significance of intracranial hypertension management in cryptococcal meningitis in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. Report of 2 cases]. 1061 40
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