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

1. The guidelines for clinical evaluation of antiepileptic drugs (AEDs), proposed by the International League Against Epilepsy in 1989, were scrutinized through our clinical experiences with zonisamide. 2. Seizure type, seizure frequency, number of concomitant AEDs, and type of epilepsy were found to be essential factors in quantitatively determining the efficacy of a new drug. 3. The majority of patients selected according to the guidelines consist inevitably of those with complex partial seizures with or without secondary generalization. Consequently, the efficacy of new AEDs is evaluated mainly in patients with partial seizures, and it is difficult to evaluate their efficacy in those with refractory generalized seizures, either convulsive or nonconvulsive. 4. In order to avoid such predilection, patients with various types of generalized seizures who are taking one or two conventional AEDs should account for 30 to 40% of the total patient population selected for clinical drug trials.
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PMID:Methodological requirements for clinical trials in refractory epilepsies--our experience with zonisamide. 155 9

Eleven patients, evaluated between 1983 and 1988, with parietal lobe seizure origin as determined by circumscribed lesion detection in all and successful surgery in 10, were retrospectively evaluated in terms of clinical seizure characteristics and electroencephalographic (EEG) findings. Seven of 11 patients reported auras prior to seizures. In 4 patients, auras were lateralized somatosensory sensations, but in 1 they were ipsilateral to the side of seizure origin, and in 2 they had only occurred many years previously when seizures began. Other auras were either nonspecific or suggested seizure origin outside of the parietal lobe. Observed seizures were of two types: asymmetrical tonic seizures with or without clonic activity and complex partial seizures with loss of contact and automatisms. Four patients had only the first type of seizure and an equal number had only the second type. Three patients had both types of seizures during different episodes. Scalp EEGs correctly localized the side and region of seizure onset in only 1 patient. Three additional patients with congruent parietal localization on scalp EEG had additional misleading EEG findings. All patients had lesions detected with neuroimaging, but in 5 this detection occurred after they had been initially evaluated. These 5 patients had intracranial EEG studies designed to localize the region of seizure origin, and correct seizure onset localization was achieved in 2. Of the other 3 patients, false localization occurred in 1, and 2 could not be localized. Four patients with known lesions and 2 of the patients in whom lesions were detected after initial intracranial evaluations were studied with subdural grid electrodes placed over the lesions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Parietal lobe epilepsy: diagnostic considerations and results of surgery. 157 58

Felbamate (2-phenyl-1,3-propanediol dicarbamate, FBM) was subjected to a series of carefully selected in vivo and in vitro tests to provide additional insight into mechanism of action, margin of safety, and clinical potential. FBM was effective against intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA)-induced clonus and i.c.v. NMDA- and quisqualic acid (quis)-induced forelimb tonic extension in mice and ineffective against i.c.v. quis-induced clonus in mice. FBM was also effective in preventing the expression of Stage 5 kindled seizures in corneal-kindled rats. The calculated protective indices (rotorod median toxic dose divided by anticonvulsant median effective dose) ranged from 28 to 146 for those tests in which FBM displayed activity. With the in vitro tests, FBM did not significantly displace [3H]MK-801 from its binding site. In contrast, FBM was effective in blocking sustained repetitive firing in mouse spinal cord neurons grown in tissue culture (median inhibitory concentration 67 micrograms/ml). This effect on repetitive firing suggests indirectly that FBM modulates sodium channel conductance. The results, when compared to similar data for phenytoin, carbamazepine, valproate, and ethosuximide, support the concept that FBM is a relatively nontoxic agent with a unique profile of anticonvulsant action, a broad margin of safety, and a clinical potential that includes at least generalized tonic-clonic and complex partial seizures.
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PMID:A neuropharmacological evaluation of felbamate as a novel anticonvulsant. 159 38

Schizencephaly is characterized by unilateral or bilateral cerebral clefts associated with neurologic deficits and epilepsy. Most commonly schizencephaly is attributed to abnormal neuronal migration, and these malformations are well visualized by current neuroimaging techniques. This report describes a patient with unilateral schizencephaly and poorly controlled complex partial seizures who was found to have a temporal lobe seizure focus; anterior temporal lobectomy produced nearly complete control of the seizures. Despite the extensive malformation, relatively restricted resection was of significant benefit. The principles of seizure focus localization and resection are applicable to the management of patients with schizencephaly.
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PMID:Temporal lobectomy for seizures associated with unilateral schizencephaly. 159 54

Complex partial seizures are the most common seizure type in patients with partial epilepsy. Most complex partial seizures emanate from the temporal lobe; however, the seizures also may be extratemporal in origin. The clinical phenomenology may distinguish complex partial seizures from nonepileptic paroxysmal disorders and other seizure types. Physiologic and psychological disorders need to be considered in the differential diagnosis of seizure activity. Long-term EEG monitoring may be necessary for select patients to confirm the diagnosis of epilepsy and to classify appropriately seizure type. Carbamazepine and phenytoin are the antiepileptic drugs of choice in the management of complex partial seizures. Polypharmacy and use of cognitively impairing antiepileptic drugs may reduce patient compliance and further impair the quality of life of the patient with epilepsy. Finally, epilepsy surgery is an important alternative for the patient with intractable partial seizures.
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PMID:Complex partial seizures. Clinical features and differential diagnosis. 160 30

Long-term electrocorticographic (ECoG) monitoring data from subdural strip electrodes are analyzed to determine factors associated with seizure-free outcome from anterior temporal lobectomy. A total of 89 consecutive patients with complex partial seizures, in whom long-term ictal video/scalp electroencephalographic monitoring was insufficient to localize their epileptogenic focus, were subsequently evaluated with long-term ictal ECoG monitoring using subdural strip electrodes. Each patient underwent anterior temporal lobectomy based on the ictal ECoG data and has been followed for at least 1 year. The following parameters were found to be statistically significant in predicting a seizure-free outcome: unilateral onset, electrical onset pattern beginning as fast spike trains, absence of frontal lobe background desynchronization at onset, and an interhemispheric propagation time of greater than 8 seconds. Electrocorticographic criteria that were not associated with seizure outcome included: right- versus left-sided onset, time from electrical to clinical ictal onset, focality of onset (number of strip electrode contacts involved), and stereotypical ECoG onset. When present, the interictal focus was concordant with the ictal focus in most patients (96%), but was falsely lateralizing in 4% of cases. It is suggested that these data should improve patient selection for temporal lobectomy when subdural strip monitoring is used during preoperative evaluation.
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PMID:Long-term ictal monitoring with subdural strip electrodes: prognostic factors for selecting temporal lobectomy candidates. 160 68

Prolactin levels were measured immediately after the seizure in some, and 15 to 20 minutes later in all of 67 children aged between 6 months and 17 years. Values were determined after grand mal, complex partial and petit mal seizures and psychogen seizures. A more than 2 to 3 fold prolactin increase over the baseline value occurred almost always after grand mal and regularly after complex partial seizures. No hyperprolactinaemia was observed after petit mal seizures. Also after psychogenic seizures a rise in serum prolactin failed. The neurophysiological basis underlying this phenomenon is a decrease of gaba- und dopaminergic systems associated with the seizure. The described method is useful in the differential diagnosis of epileptogenic versus psychogenic seizures.
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PMID:[Serum prolactin after cerebral and psychogenic seizures in childhood and adolescence--an additional useful method for differentiating the two forms of seizure]. 161 80

This investigation evaluated the role of preoperative psychological adjustment, degree of postoperative seizure reduction, and other relevant variables (age, education, IQ, age at onset of epilepsy, laterality of resection) in determining emotional/psychosocial outcome following anterior temporal lobectomy. Ninety seven patients with complex partial seizures of temporal lobe origin were administered the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI), Washington Psychosocial Seizure Inventory (WPSI), and the General Health Questionnaire (GHQ) both before and six to eight months after anterior temporal lobectomy. The data were subjected to a nonparametric rank sum technique (O'Brien's procedure) which combined the test scores to form a single outcome index (TOTAL PSYCHOSOCIAL OUTCOME) that was analysed by multiple regression procedures. Results indicated that the most powerful predictors of patients' overall postoperative psychosocial outcome were: 1) The adequacy of their preoperative psychosocial adjustment, and 2) A totally seizure-free outcome. Additional analyses were carried out separately on the MMPI, WPSI, and GHQ to determine whether findings varied as a function of the specific outcome measure. These results were related to the larger literature concerned with the psychological outcome of anterior temporal lobectomy.
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PMID:Preoperative psychological adjustment and surgical outcome are determinants of psychosocial status after anterior temporal lobectomy. 161 18

Vitamin E (d-alpha-tocopherol) has proven to be a useful adjunct to anticonvulsant drugs in clinical studies. Improvement has occurred even in patients with complex partial seizures, which are often resistant to drug therapy. In animals, vitamin E is effective against ferrous chloride seizures, hyperbaric oxygen seizures and penicillin-induced seizures. It has failed, however, to show anticonvulsant effects in the standard animal models used for drug screening--the maximal electroshock and threshold pentylenetetrazol tests. The present experiments were designed to further explore the anti-epileptic actions of vitamin E in animals. Three models related to complex partial epilepsy were used: 1) the development of amygdala-kindled seizures; 2) the development of electrically-induced status in kindled animals; and 3) the development of kainic-acid seizures. Vitamin E failed to produce significant effects in any of the models.
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PMID:The anticonvulsant effects of vitamin E: a further evaluation. 162 46

Although electrical seizure activity in response to opioids such as fentanyl has been well described in animals, scalp electroencephalographic (EEG) recordings have failed to demonstrate epileptiform activity following narcotic administration in humans. The purpose of this study was to determine whether fentanyl is capable of evoking electrical seizure activity in patients with complex partial (temporal lobe) seizures. Nine patients were studied in whom recording electrode arrays had been placed in the bitemporal epidural space several days earlier to determine which temporal lobe gave rise to their seizures. The symptomatic temporal lobe was localized by correlating clinical and electrical seizure activity obtained during continuous simultaneous videotape and epidural EEG monitoring. In each patient, clinical seizures and electrical seizure activity were consistently demonstrated to arise unilaterally from one temporal lobe (four on the right, five on the left). During fentanyl induction of anesthesia in preparation for secondary craniotomy for anterior temporal lobectomy, eight of the nine patients exhibited electrical seizure activity at fentanyl doses ranging from 17.7 to 35.71 micrograms.kg-1 (mean 25.75 micrograms.kg-1). More importantly, four of these eight seizures occurred initially in the "healthy" temporal lobe contralateral to the surgically resected lobe from which the clinical seizures had been shown to arise. These findings indicate that, in patients with complex partial seizures, moderate doses of fentanyl can evoke electrical seizure activity. The results of this study could have important implications for neurosurgical centers where electrocorticography is used during surgery for the purpose of determining the extent of the resection.
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PMID:Fentanyl-induced electrocorticographic seizures in patients with complex partial epilepsy. 162 7


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