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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 defined as a combination of nevoid skin alterations, epileptic
seizures
, and psychomotoric retardation. Involvement of other organs, especially the eyes, may also occur, but is not obligatory. The present report is concerned with a case that combined regional odontodysplasia with nevoid skin alterations in the overlying skin area of the face. This observation suggests that odontodysplasia may be the result of aberrations in the development and migration of cells of the neural crest occurring early in embryonic life.
...
PMID:Regional odontodysplasia in epidermal nevus syndrome. 392 81
A patient with subdural hygroma in the perinatal period developed into a right hand sided spastic hemiplegia with epileptic
seizures
and intellectual deficit. On the age of 17 years a linear dermatosis that proved to be a naevus unislateris was remarked. The combination of linear nevi and neurological deficit is known as the
epidermal nevus syndrome
.
...
PMID:Linear cutaneous lesions and neurological deficit. A case report. 632 76
The
sebaceous nevus syndrome
is sometimes associated with hemimegalencephaly and a group of related abnormalities including ipsilateral gyral malformation, mental retardation,
seizures
, especially infantile spasms, and facial hemihypertrophy. This combination has been described as the "neurological variant of
epidermal nevus syndrome
." Other brain malformations have been reported only rarely. We report on a child with a subtle sebaceous nevus associated with hemimegalencephaly who also had agenesis of the corpus callosum and Dandy-Walker malformation.
...
PMID:Agenesis of the corpus callosum and Dandy-Walker malformation associated with hemimegalencephaly in the sebaceous nevus syndrome. 762 36
"Epidermal nevus syndrome" ("ENS") is a neurocutaneous disorder in which epidermal nevi are associated with other abnormalities, most commonly of the skeletal and central nervous systems. We present two cases of
epidermal nevus syndrome (ENS)
with very different clinical findings. The first case is a newborn with multiple linear epidermal nevi of the trunk and limbs, and several other anomalies, including bony duplications of the lower limbs and hypoplastic left heart syndrome. The second patient, a 6-year-old boy, has a linear nevus sebaceous of the scalp with severe CNS involvement, including generalized
seizures
, moderate mental retardation, microcephaly, and a left hemiparesis. He also has genitourinary, cardiac, and skeletal defects. These two patients exhibit several abnormalities not previously recognized and illustrate the wide clinical spectrum of "epidermal nevus syndrome." We present a review of the clinical findings in 74 cases of "ENS." Correlation was noted between the presence of skin lesions located on the head and CNS involvement. The wide clinical spectrum of "ENS" as illustrated by these two patients suggests that "ENS" is a causally heterogeneous group of disorders.
...
PMID:Further delineation of the epidermal nevus syndrome: two cases with new findings and literature review. 836 47
We report unilateral megalencephaly in a 14-year-old girl with
linear sebaceous nevus syndrome
. A review of the radiologic findings in this case and in previously reported cases suggests that the
seizures
and developmental delay in this neurocutaneous syndrome are related to the migration anomaly of unilateral megalencephaly.
...
PMID:Association of linear sebaceous nevus syndrome and unilateral megalencephaly. 814 Oct 58
The
epidermal nevus syndrome (ENS)
is an unusual neurocutaneous disorder consisting of the combination of an epidermal nevus and a central nervous system (CNS), ophthalmological, and/or skeletal abnormality. The study reports four new patients with ENS. Each had a confirmatory biopsy of the epidermal nevus, abnormal neurological examination findings, and documented CNS anatomical studies by imaging or autopsy. The paper also reviews the literature in English to determine neurological abnormalities found in skin-biopsy-proven cases of ENS. Hemi-atrophy, hemimegalencephaly, migrational abnormalities and vascular anomalies were found to be the most frequent intracranial abnormalities associated with ENS.
Seizures
and/or disabling moderate to severe developmental delays were present in a majority of patients.
Seizure
onset during the neonatal period or early infancy was associated with major hemispheric malformations. Neuroectodermal-derived ocular lesions were often bilateral. No consistent relation between laterality of the nevus and laterality of CNS abnormalities was found, supporting the gene mosaicism theory of pathogenesis.
...
PMID:Developmental neural abnormalities and seizures in epidermal nevus syndrome. 876 Nov 67
A 9-year-old girl was diagnosed as having a
linear sebaceous nevus syndrome
(LSNS). The nevus sebaceus was located on the face, and the girl also had nevoid hypertrichosis on the neck, sensorineural deafness, partial anodontia, blocked tear ducts, labiopalatoschisis, and an area of micropolygyria in the left encephalic (cerebral) hemisphere. Electroencephalographic alterations were detected, but they were not accompanied by a history of
seizures
; furthermore, the child was not mentally retarded. This phenotypic pattern of LSNS is unusual for the rarity of associated abnormalities.
...
PMID:Linear sebaceous nevus syndrome: report of a patient with unusual associated abnormalities. 891 19
We report a case of
linear nevus sebaceous syndrome
with
seizure
, mental retardation, and hemiparesis. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) clearly demonstrated associated brain malformations of unilateral megalencephaly with cortical dysplasia and white matter change ipsilateral to the sebaceous nevi of the face and neck. Although magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) demonstrated only distortion of the main cerebral arteries without any occlusive or dysplastic findings, single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) using [123I]N-Isopropyl-p-iodoamphetamine (IMP) revealed hypoperfusion in the affected cerebral hemisphere.
...
PMID:Unilateral megalencephaly in linear nevus sebaceous syndrome: a neuroradiological case report. 913 88
Startle-induced epilepsy was observed in a 5-year-old boy with
epidermal nevus syndrome
. He manifested linear nevus on the face and neck, mild mental retardation, and right hemiparesis. Massive myoclonus, followed by tonic
seizures
, had been triggered by unexpected auditory stimuli since 3 years of age. The startle-induced
seizures
were the only epileptic manifestation. Interictal EEG occasionally depicted spontaneous focal spikes and waves in the left frontotemporal area, and ictal EEG depicted vertex spikes and then diffuse slow spike-and-wave complex bursts. Left frontal and perisylvian cortical atrophy and a white matter abnormality in the left frontal area were revealed by magnetic resonance imaging. Single photon emission computed tomography demonstrated diffuse low perfusion in the left cerebral hemisphere. Lower amplitude potentials in the left cerebral cortex were evident during somatosensory evoked potential evaluation. These results indicate that hemispheric dysfunction could cause startle-induced epilepsy in this patient.
...
PMID:Startle-induced epilepsy in a patient with epidermal nevus syndrome. 958 33
Hemispherectomy procedures are performed in patients for whom focal cortical resection would be predicted to produce a significant reduction in
seizures
. The functional hemispherectomy procedure consists of disconnecting the hemispheres while attempting, in some cases, to preserve parenchyma. This study retrospectively reviews the histopathologic findings in 37 cases of functional hemispherectomy performed between 1990 and 1998 at a major epilepsy center. Procedures were performed in 20 males and 17 females who ranged in age from 3 months to 37 years (mean age, 9.6 years). In all but two cases, more than half or all the material submitted for pathologic testing was examined histologically. Cortical dysplasias or hemimegalencephaly were identified in 14 patients. The most common patterns of dysplasia observed included architectural disorganization (n = 13), increased molecular layer neurons (n = 11), and neuronal cytomegaly (n = 11). One patient was known to have
epidermal nevus syndrome
. Six patients had Sturge-Weber syndrome. Remote infarct/ischemic damage was identified as the etiology of
seizures
in six patients; four of these patients had mild associated secondary cortical architectural abnormalities. Three patients demonstrated pathology consistent with Rasmussen's encephalitis; one additional patient had chronic encephalitis changes, not otherwise specified. In two cases, changes consistent with hippocampal sclerosis were identified; additionally, hippocampal neuronal loss and gliosis was focally identified in three patients. Most of these patients had coexistent cortical dysplasia or radiographic evidence of remote infarct. One specimen demonstrated areas of infarct following resection of an arteriovenous malformation. In two specimens, significant histopathologic findings were not identified; both of these patients had radiographic evidence of remote infarct. The spectrum of pathologic conditions that may be encountered in the setting of a functional hemispherectomy is varied and in this study most frequently included cortical dysplasia, Sturge-Weber syndrome remote infarct, and Rasmussen's encephalitis.
...
PMID:Histopathologic findings in 37 cases of functional hemispherectomy. 1045 46
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