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

1) Etiology of convulsions starting prior to two years of age was discussed in 418 cases. Neonatal seizures before 30 days old appeared in 86 cases (53 boys and 33 girls). Three hundred and thirty-two patients (172 boys and 160 girls) had convulsions in infancy. Twelve patients (9 boys and 3 girls) suffered from convulsions both in neonatal and infantile period. 2)Etiology of convulsions was prenatal in 67 cases (16%), natal in 49 cases (12%), postnatal in 158 cases (38%) and unknown in 144 cases (34%). Prenatal factors consisted of cerebral malformation (23 cases, 6%), associated physical minor anomaly such as cataracta or finger abomaly (11 cases, 3%), abnormal pernatal history (8 cases, 2%), congenital heart disease 3) cases, 1%), tuberose scleorsis (7 cases, 2%) and positive family history (13 cases, 3%). Postnatal causes included hypocalcemia or hypoglycemia (7 cases, 2%), brain tumors (3 cases, 1%), breath-holding spells (21 cases, 5%), febrile convulsion (44 cases, 11%), bathing (3 cases, 1%), afebrile colds (3 cases, 1%), purulent meningitis (17 cases, 4%), DPT immunization (10 cases 2%), vaccination (7 cases, 2%) and acute hemiplegia (10 cases, 2%). The group of unknown etiology were as fns (38 cases, 9%), epilepsy associated with interictal signs (23 cases, 6%), benign infantile convulsions (57 cases, 14%), neonatal convulsion of unknown etiology (12 cases, 3%) and miscellaneous categories (4%). 3) Pregnancy was abnormal in 53% of cases with cerebral malformation. Asphyxia at birth was noted in 43% of patients with tuberose sclerosis and in 35% of congenital cerebral abomaly. 4) Pneumoencephalographic examinations revealed midline anomaly in 50% of cerebral malformation. It was abnormal in all cases with tuberose sclerosis, head injury and epilepsy with interseizure neurological signs. 5) There were no correlations between the seizure pattern and the etiology in neonatal convulsion. In infancy, focal-unilateral convulsions and infantile spasms were frequently associated with organic damages. Generalized seizures were seen in organic lesions as well as functional ones although approximately half of the cases were febrile convulsion, benign infantile convulsion or breath-holding spell. 6) EEG features of cerebral malformation were asymmetrical or multifocal dischages in neonatal period and hypsarhythmia or focal-unilateral spike discharges in infancy. Tuberose sclerosis showed hypsarhythmia in infancy. In birth injury or cerebral anoxia, EEG mostly revealed focal-unilateral abnormality or suppression-burst activity in newborns and hypsarhythmia or focal features in infants. 7) The occurrence rate of neonatal seizures in autopsy cases with intracranial pathology was demonstrated. EEG with intravenous diazepam was useful to know pathophysiology of infantile spasms.
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PMID:Etiology of convulsions in neonatal and infantile period. 99 19

Neonatal seizures are a symptom of central nervous system disturbances. Neonatal seizures may be identified by direct clinical observation by the majority of electrographic seizures are clinically silent or subtle. Electrographic seizures in the newborn consist of periodic or rhythmic discharges that are distinctively different from normal background cerebral activity. Utilizing these differences, we have developed a technique to identify electrographic seizure activity. In this study, autocorrelation analysis was used to distinguish seizures from background electrocerebral activity. Autocorrelation data were scored to quantify the periodicity using a newly developed scoring system. This method, Scored Autocorrelation Moment (SAM) analysis, successfully distinguished epochs of EEGs with seizures from those without (N = 117 epochs, 58 with seizure and 59 without). SAM analysis showed a sensitivity of 84% and a specificity of 98%. SAM analysis of EEG may provide a method for monitoring electrographic seizures in high-risk newborns.
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PMID:Detection of neonatal seizures through computerized EEG analysis. 137 Jan 41

Twenty-eight term neonates with severe perinatal asphyxia were referred to a tertiary neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). The morbidity of asphyxia included involvement of the pulmonary (n = 24 infants), central nervous system (n = 22), renal (n = 15), cardiac (n = 14), metabolic (n = 13) and hematologic (n = 10) systems. The majority of neonates had more than three organ systems involved. Twenty-four neonates survived the neonatal course and at NICU discharge all system effects other than the central nervous system had resolved. At 5 years (60 months), 14 children had a normal neurologic examination, 9 had spastic quadriplegia and one had hemiplegia. Nine children had a McCarthy General Cognitive Index (GCI) greater than or equal to 84, 3 had a GCI between 68 and 83 and 12 scored less than 67. Neonatal seizures, renal problems, microcephaly at 3 months, and post-neonatal seizures were associated with an abnormal neurologic outcome or a GCI less than 67. A neurologic examination during the first year of life may reveal whether children with birth asphyxia will be relatively normal at age 5 years or whether they will show considerable delay.
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PMID:Acute neonatal morbidity and long-term central nervous system sequelae of perinatal asphyxia in term infants. 171 44

Seizures in the newborn are different from those occurring in older children and adults. Health care professionals may find it difficult to recognize neonatal seizures because of their sometimes subtle manifestations. Convulsive behavior has many etiologies; some are associated with a favorable and some with a poor prognosis. Treatment protocol is controversial because both the seizures themselves and the drugs used to treat them may damage the immature brain. The high mortality and morbidity rates of infants who experience seizures make it imperative that the neonatal seizure be recognized, its etiology diagnosed, and treatment begun promptly.
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PMID:Neonatal seizures: an overview. 187 79

Neonatal seizures are a frequent problem encountered in neonatal nurseries, but their significance is controversial. Some investigators regard newborn seizures as simply epiphenomena and reflective of brain injury, whereas others note associated metabolic and physiologic aberrations suggesting that seizures per se are injurious to the central nervous system. The proper approach to the treatment of neonatal seizures depends on the etiology because treatment differs if seizures are of metabolic, toxic, or structural origin. Most studies reporting the efficacy of anticonvulsant agents neither define the seizure characteristics being treated nor use electroencephalographic documentation of seizure activity. The choice of anticonvulsants has been based on tradition rather than on the proven superiority of one agent over another. Although several anticonvulsants are available, phenobarbital remains the drug most frequently chosen as the initial agent in treatment. The important pharmacologic considerations of anticonvulsants include route of administration, ability to achieve therapeutically efficacious and predictable plasma levels rapidly, drug distribution, the availability and affinity of receptor sites, protein-binding characteristics, effects on brain growth, and cardiovascular toxicities. At the present time, critical questions remain regarding the effects of both seizures and anticonvulsants on the developing central nervous system.
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PMID:Neonatal seizures: diagnosis and treatment. 204 25

The effect of parity on intrapartum fetal scalp pH was investigated in 6466 patients in labour with a live fetus who were delivered in 1987. 350 (5.4%) required fetal scalp blood sampling for pH (FBS), 236 primigravidae (10.4%) and 114 multigravidae (2.7%) (P less than 0.001). Fetal acidosis (pH less than 7.20) was detected in 35 patients, 27 primigravidae (11.4%) and 8 multigravidae (7.0%) (P less than 0.001). The incidence of intrapartum acidosis in the 2275 primigravidae and the 4191 multigravidae was 1.2 and 0.2% respectively (P less than 0.001). The two deaths from birth asphyxia and three cases of neonatal seizures occurred in primigravidae. In primigravidae requiring FBS, fetal acidosis was not associated with the use of oxytocin or with increased duration of labour. Neonatal seizures were more common overall in primigravidae than in multigravidae and more common in patients requiring FBS than in those not requiring FBS (P less than 0.05). The higher incidence of FBS, fetal scalp acidosis and neonatal seizures in primigravidae has important implications for intrapartum fetal monitoring.
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PMID:Fetal acidosis in labour: a prospective study on the effect of parity. 205 Feb 60

Dural sinus thrombosis in the newborn period has been infrequently documented and its clinical presentation remains obscure. Seventeen patients, all of whom were born at term with dural sinus thrombosis diagnosed in the neonatal period, were retrospectively identified and reviewed. Diagnosis was determined by unenhanced computed tomography which demonstrated a dense sagittal sinus with concomitant small ventricles. Two patients had ancillary studies (i.e., cerebral angiography and nuclear flow scan) which confirmed the diagnosis. Only 4 patients had evidence of perinatal asphyxia. Three patients were identified as having associated conditions known to predispose them to dural sinus thrombosis. None of the patients tested had an identifiable hypercoagulable state. Neonatal seizures were the initial presentation in 15 patients. Seizure onset predominantly occurred during the first week of life. Subsequent examinations were available in all 17 patients and ranged up to 6 years. Only 3 patients had seizures beyond the neonatal period. In 11 of 12 infants with no history of perinatal asphyxia, neurodevelopmental outcomes were normal. Two of 4 infants with perinatal asphyxia had neurologic sequelae. Dural sinus thrombosis represents an important and under-recognized cause of neonatal seizures in term infants. In the absence of perinatal asphyxia, normal neuro-developmental outcome is likely and the risk of seizure recurrence is low.
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PMID:Neonatal dural sinus thrombosis. 247 99

Neonatal seizures may be characterized and classified according to their clinical features and presumed pathophysiology. There is evidence to suggest that seizures may either be epileptic in origin or initiated and mediated by nonepileptic mechanisms. Therapeutic decisions may be based on bedside assessment of the pathophysiology of observed seizures. Although EEG/video monitoring plays a role in the management of neonatal seizures, clinical evaluation of the seizures may provide initial data critical to decisions concerning immediate management.
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PMID:Consensus and controversy in the clinical management of neonatal seizures. 266 12

Electroencephalographic seizures were evaluated in 112 neonates. The first portion of the study involved 80 neonates with clinically identified abnormal movements, 8 of whom (10%) had electroencephalographic evidence of seizures coincident with this activity. Patients with abnormal movements (90%) had no concurrent electrical seizures. In the second part of the study, 40 infants who had electrical seizures were investigated. Eight of these infants had been identified during the first part of the study. Two-thirds of the patients (25) were premature. Sixteen patients (40%) died; 90% had brain lesions documented by computed tomography and/or postmortem study. Cerebral infarction and intraventricular hemorrhage were the most common lesions. One-third of the survivors (8 of 24 patients) were normal at a mean age of 3 years, while two-thirds had significant neurologic and developmental abnormalities. Neonatal seizures often are subtle, not associated with observable clinical expression, and associated with adverse development. Electroencephalographic confirmation is important in the evaluation of neonatal seizures.
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PMID:EEG diagnoses of neonatal seizures: clinical correlations and outcome. 271 34

Seizures in the newborn are a distinctive sign of underlying disease. Different convulsive patterns are described. The most common neurologic syndrome consists of subtle seizures. The most important cause is ischemic encephalopathy. Hypocalcemia is the main metabolic disease. Hypoglycemia seems not to be of special relevance for pathogenesis of newborn seizures. Other episodic symptoms of non-epileptic origin should be considered in the differential diagnosis. It is critical to diagnose the cause and to treat it, since the prognosis depends on the underlying disturbance. Phenobarbital is the anticonvulsive drug of first choice. Duration of treatment is determinated of an preexisting brain damage. Newborns with normal neurological evaluation don't need any longer anticonvulsive treatment after cessation of seizures. The EEG is an important prognostic tool.
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PMID:[Neonatal spasms--a review of symptoms, etiology, therapy and prognosis]. 310 Aug 62


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