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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (
seizures
)
80,221
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We measured local cerebral glucose utilization in 19 patients with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome (LG), partial
seizures
(PS), atypical and classical phenylketonuria (PKU), Leigh disease, and subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE), using positron emission tomography (PET). The mean values of regional glucose utilization in interictal scans of LG were significantly reduced in all brain regions when compared with that of PS (P less than 0.005). PET studies of glucose utilization in LG revealed more widespread hypometabolism than in PS. Two siblings with dihydropteridine reductase deficiency, a patient with classical PKU, and a boy with cytochrome c oxidase deficiency showed reduced glucose utilization in the caudate and putamen. A marked decrease in glucose utilization was found in the cortical gray matter of a patient with rapidly progressive SSPE, despite relatively preserved utilization in the caudate and putamen. The PET study of a patient with slowly progressive SSPE revealed patterns and values of glucose utilization similar to those of the control. Thus, PET provided a useful clue toward understanding
brain dysfunction
in LG, PS, PKU, Leigh disease, and SSPE.
...
PMID:Cerebral glucose utilization in pediatric neurological disorders determined by positron emission tomography. 349 26
Fourteen maternal deaths from eclampsia or severe pre-eclampsia where disturbed cerebral function, as evidenced by prolonged unconsciousness, was given as the main cause of death are reviewed. Prolonged duration of
seizures
, hypotensive/hypoxic episodes, cerebral oedema and intracranial haematomas were most frequently identified as causative agents in the development of
cerebral dysfunction
. Failure to maintain an airway and iatrogenically induced hypotension were the two most important contributory factors to the patients' deaths. Management recommendations to prevent this type of maternal death are given.
...
PMID:Maternal deaths from neurological complications of hypertensive crises in pregnancy. 356 10
Methotrexate may cause
seizures
, dementia, and leukoencephalopathy when given in toxic doses to children with leukemia or solid tumors. Even in therapeutic doses, treatment with this drug is associated with an increased incidence of
seizures
in children with leukemia. To study mechanisms of injury, juvenile rats were given multiple intraventricular injections of methotrexate and the brains were analyzed for histopathology and biogenic amine metabolites of dopamine and serotonin. Disruption of monoamine metabolism has been proposed as a cause of
brain dysfunction
from this chemotherapy. Multiple injections (1 or 2 mg/kg) produced convulsions in an increasingly larger percentage of animals at higher cumulative doses, and five doses produced the neuropathological changes seen in human leukoencephalopathy. A single dose reduced the concentration of brain metabolites of dopamine, but not serotonin, six hours later. The effect was less pronounced after five doses. This rodent model should be useful for studying the metabolic basis of methotrexate encephalopathy.
...
PMID:A model of methotrexate encephalopathy: neurotransmitter and pathologic abnormalities. 359 35
We studied personality features of 19 patients with pseudoseizures (PS) only. Scores on a personality inventory (MMPI) were compared with those of adults with generalized
seizures
and correlated to cognitive measures (Halstead-Reitan). Mean MMPI scores did not differ significantly, and no profile distinguished PS and epilepsy patients. MMPI abnormalities of PS patients were diverse and seldom characteristic of hysteria. Eight PS patients had cognitive impairment, two without MMPI evidence of personality disorder. These findings suggest that the etiology of pseudoseizures is multifactorial, involving different psychopathologies and sometimes
cerebral dysfunction
.
...
PMID:Personality of patients with pseudoseizures. 370 65
A 40-year-old man developed an acute state of manic exultation when given carbamazepine for complex partial seizures. The symptoms subsided when carbamazepine was discontinued, but recurred when the drug was inadvertently given again. This observation does not accord with previous evidence of a beneficial psychotropic effect for carbamazepine in some epileptic patients and of some effect in the treatment of mania. Carbamazepine has been shown to have complex actions on multiple neurotransmitter and neuromodulator systems, and it is possible that paradoxical effects of this nature may occur in susceptible individuals, as has been found with other sedative and anticonvulsant agents. The patient recalled brief euphoric periods after
seizures
, which may suggest that carbamazepine exacerbated or prolonged preexisting
cerebral dysfunction
.
...
PMID:Manic state with carbamazepine therapy of seizures. 379 91
We report data from four patients with unilateral epileptiform status activity within different structures of the temporal lobe, recorded during stereoelectroencephalographic presurgical evaluation. The ictal clinical symptoms accompanying neocortical and mesiobasal limbic discharges (two patients with complex partial status epilepticus) consisted of various psychosensory and vegetative signs, which can be understood on the basis of the spatiotemporal analysis of the discharges. The other two patients with circumscribed long-lasting mesiobasal limbic epileptiform activity represent unilateral pure limbic status epilepticus and were characterized by a marked behavioral syndrome (with stickiness, aggressivity, etc.) and a monomorphic gustatory aura continua, respectively. The latter patient, with left hippocampal discharges of nearly continuous epileptiform character, was also assessed with tachistoscopic tasks. Performance revealed cognitive impairment only in the epileptically discharging hemisphere and in dependence on the quality of the EEG pattern. After unilateral selective amygdalohippocampectomy, the two patients with limbic status epilepticus were
seizure
free and had markedly improved behavior and cognitive functions. Thus, patients with nonconvulsive status epilepticus represent an ideal model, although rare, to correlate behavior alterations and
brain dysfunction
.
...
PMID:Unilateral limbic epileptic status activity: stereo EEG, behavioral, and cognitive data. 397 48
We observed a sudden respiratory arrest in four term newborn infants after a clinically symptom-free period. There were no cardiac, pulmonary or metabolic changes responsible for these events. Signs of
cerebral dysfunction
existed (muscular hypotonia, jitterness,
seizures
). Cranial computerized tomographic scans were performed during the period of respirator treatment within the first week of life. The density of the brain structures was significantly decreased in all cases, three of the patients showed a complete compression of the lateral ventricles. These findings indicated severe brain swelling as a consequence of cerebral hypoxia. There was a history of umbilical cord occlusion in two cases. In the remaining patients we must assume an undetected hypoxic-ischemic episode prior to the onset of labor. We used hyperventilation, corticosteroids, phenobarbital, diuretics and fluid restriction for therapy. Later on the babies received special physiotherapy. Control CT-scans were performed during the fourth or fifth week of life. The findings were normal in one patient. Signs of mild focal brain atrophy developed in two babies. A more severe cortical atrophic lesion of both temporal lobes was found in one patient. He suffered from a slight cerebral palsy. No neurodevelopmental handicaps could be found in all the other patients on long term follow-up. The EEG examination was performed between the fifth and seventh month of life. No pathologic changes were observed. We conclude that severe generalized brain edema in the newborn is not necessarily followed by extensive brain damage. We think it important to develop more sensitive methods for detecting a hypoxic ischemic crisis preceding the birth.
...
PMID:[Clinical and computed tomographic observations on newborn infants with generalized brain edema due to perinatal asphyxia]. 397 83
The EEG of the newborn consists of a mixed activity which varies from 1 to 22/s. Waves in the alpha band may occur, but they indicate
cerebral dysfunction
if they are seen in a rhythmic uninterrupted sequence. Eight newborns who showed rhythmic alpha activity in their EEG are included in our study. This activity occurred together with rhythmic theta waves or was followed by them as part of ongoing electrographic
seizure
activity. All newborns studied were very sick. Three suffered from severe perinatal asphyxia with persistent fetal circulation; in addition one of them had bacterial meningitis. Two infants suffered from herpes encephalitis. In those cases the rhythmic alpha activity temporarily showed a certain periodicity. This EEG pattern was also seen in a small for gestational age premature infant who had septicemia and subarachnoid hemorrhage and in two extremely premature babies with intraventricular hemorrhage. Four infants were curarized. All of the others also had clinically observed
seizures
. Rhythmic alpha-activity in the neonatal EEG represents an electrical
seizure
discharge. It may also occur in premature infants who suffer from intraventricular hemorrhage. Obviously it does not have a diagnostic value. The prognostic value depends upon the underlying disease and the grade of background suppression in the EEG. Anticonvulsant therapy should be administered early using a sufficient dosage.
...
PMID:[Rhythmic alpha activity in the EEG of premature and newborn infants]. 640 15
Four cases with intractable epilepsy and mental retardation (Epi + MR), four cases of mental retardation (MR), one case of mental retardation without epileptic
seizures
for the last several years (MR + (Epi] and two normal children were studied on their sleep pattern. Besides these, two cases of epilepsy (Epi) were examined. Awake time increased in the Epi + MR group. Slow wave sleep decreased markedly in the Epi + MR group. REM sleep decreased in the MR + (Epi) and Epi + MR groups. REM density was lowered in the following order: normal----Epi----MR----Epi + MR groups. The difference of sleep pattern among the normal, Epi and MR groups was not exhibited clearly, but severe sleep disturbances were shown in the Epi + MR group, implicating the severe
brain dysfunction
in the cortex and the brain stem.
...
PMID:Sleep pattern in children with intractable epilepsy and mental retardation. 654 13
Positron emission tomography (PET) using 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) was used to map local cerebral glucose utilization in the study of local cerebral function. This information differs fundamentally from structural assessment by means of computed tomography (CT). In normal human volunteers, the FDG scan was used to determine the cerebral metabolic response to controlled sensory stimulation and the effects of aging. After stroke, regional
brain dysfunction
is more extensive than had been suspected on the basis of CT scans. Cerebral metabolic patterns are distinctive among depressed and demented elderly patients. The FDG scan appears normal in the depressed patient, studded with multiple metabolic defects in patients with multiple infarct dementia, and in the patients with Alzheimer disease, metabolism is particularly reduced in the parietal cortex, but only slightly reduced in the caudate and thalamus. The caudate is markedly hypometabolic in Huntington disease, even in the absence of caudate atrophy, and possibly may be mildly hypometabolic even before the appearance of symptoms. The interictal FDG scan effectively detects hypometabolic brain zones that are sites of onset for
seizures
in patients with partial epilepsy, even though these zones usually appear normal on CT scans. The future prospects of PET are discussed.
...
PMID:Imaging local brain function with emission computed tomography. 660 81
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