Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0036572 (
seizures
)
80,221
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We describe clinical manifestations and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings in a man and his mother who were diagnosed as having a neuronal migration disorder. The son had severe psychomotor retardation and the mother had intractable
seizures
and mild psychomotor retardation. MRI demonstrated moderate pachygyria in the son and subcortical heterotopia in the mother. In both patients, the frontal parts of the brain were characteristically more affected than any other areas. A dominant pattern of inheritance in the family suggests a genetic role in the underlying cause of the migration disorder. The difference in severity between the two patients also suggests an X-linked dominant inheritance. Our family fits the condition of X-linked
lissencephaly
.
...
PMID:Familial neuronal migration disorder: subcortical laminar heterotopia in a mother and pachygyria in the son. 948 90
We report three neonates, one boy and two girls, born to an inbred Arab family who had cortical dysplasia, probably
agyria
-pachygyria, and agenesis of the corpus callosum. All had asphyxia, intractable
seizures
, and increased muscle tone at birth and died in the neonatal period. Congenital microcephaly or dysmorphic features were absent. Cytogenetic abnormality, metabolic disorder, and intrauterine infection were excluded. These cases suggest a new cerebral dysgenesis syndrome with autosomal recessive inheritance.
...
PMID:Agyria-pachygyria and agenesis of the corpus callosum: autosomal recessive inheritance with neonatal death. 959 9
Neuronal migration anomalies are a spectrum of brain malformations caused by insults to migrating neuroblasts during the sixth week to fifth month of gestation. To study the characteristics of MRI findings in migration anomalies, MR images of 36 patients (28 children and 8 adults) with migration anomalies were evaluated. Five patients had
lissencephaly
, eight had pachygyria, twelve had schizencephaly, six had heterotopias of gray matter, three had hemimegalencephaly, and two had polymicrogyria. The frequency of migration anomalies was 0.51% of all cranial MRI studies and 1.21% of pediatric cranial MRI studies at our hospital. The major clinical presentations of these patients were
seizure
(64%), development delay (42%), motor deficits (42%) and mental retardation (25%). Twenty-five patients (69%) associated with other brain anomalies, including: other migration anomalies in 12 cases (33%), absence of the septum pellucidum in 10 cases (28%), Dandy-Walker malformation/variant in 5 cases, arachnoid cyst in 4 cases, agenesis of the corpus callosum in 3 cases, holoprosencephaly in 2 cases, mega cisterna magna in 1 case and cephalocele in 1 case. Some of them presented with multiple complicated anomalies. As MR imaging provides superb gray-white matter distinction, details of cortical anatomy and multiplanar capability, it can clearly delineate the detail morphologic changes of the brain caused by neuronal migration disorders as well as the associated anomalies.
...
PMID:Magnetic resonance images of neuronal migration anomalies. 978 Jun 1
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has enabled the identification of neuronal migration disorders in living subjects. This represents an important achievement in the diagnosis of patients with these anomalies. At least five affected families with coexistent subcortical laminar heterotopia and
lissencephaly
have been reported recently. This association suggests an X-linked pattern of inheritance. In the family that we report, the mother suffered from epilepsy and the oldest daughter from epilepsy and mental retardation. Both patients showed subcortical laminar heterotopia on MRI. The youngest son presented a severe encephalopathy with early onset
seizures
, and was found to show
lissencephaly
on MRI. The other two siblings, a boy and a girl, had no neurological abnormalities. The severity of these patients' clinical symptoms were clearly related to MRI findings.
...
PMID:X-linked subcortical laminar heterotopia and lissencephaly: a new family. 981 May 65
The role of inheritance in neuronal migrational disorders is under intense investigation. Studies on neuronal migrational disorders (NMDs) from developing countries that have a high rate of parental consanguinity are lacking. The present study included 29 children (aged 15 days-12 years, mean age 1.4 years) who were diagnosed to have NMDs, from a non-selected population with
seizures
and non-selected population of cognitive developmental delay, in the period January 1994 to April 1997. Seventeen (58.6 per cent) patients had
lissencephaly
, four (13.8 per cent) patients had pachygyria, three (10.3 per cent) patients had neuronal heterotopia, four (13.8 per cent) patients had schizencephaly, one patient (3.4 per cent) had hemimegalencephaly, and 14 (48.2 per cent) patients with NMDs had other associated conditions. Lissencephalic patients had a high rate of parental consanguinity (88.2 per cent) and family history of possible similar cases (76.4 per cent). In conclusion,
lissencephaly
is probably the commonest neuronal migrational disorder in communities with a high rate of parental consanguinity, adding significant support to the literature on the genetic aetiology of
lissencephaly
.
...
PMID:Clinical patterns of neuronal migrational disorders and parental consanguinity. 997 79
By means of differential display techniques, we have previously identified an mRNA transcript whose expression is highly induced in the rat hippocampus by kainate-elicited
seizures
. Here, we report the cloning of a corresponding cDNA encoding a 55-amino-acid, serine-rich peptide which contains four predicted phosphorylation sites. The peptide was designated CaMK-related peptide (CARP) as it shares significant amino acid sequence identity with part of a novel putative calcium/calmodulin-dependent kinase (CaMK-VI) that was also cloned in this study. It appears that CARP and CaMK-VI are derived from the same gene through differential splicing. Intriguingly, CARP also exhibits 64% amino acid sequence identity with the C-terminal part of human doublecortin, encoded by a recently identified gene which is mutated in patients with X-linked
lissencephaly
and the double-cortex syndrome. In addition, the structure of CARP resembles the autoinhibitory, serine-rich N-terminal domain of CaMK-IV, suggesting a possible modulatory role of CARP with respect to CaMK activity. Northern blot analysis and in situ hybridization experiments showed that CARP mRNA is specifically induced by kainate-elicited
seizures
in the dentate gyrus and in the pyramidal layers CA1 and CA2, but not in CA3. In contrast, kainate-induced
seizures
did not change the level of expression of the CaMK-VI gene. We propose that CARP induction leads to the modulation of kinase activity in specific subregions of the rat hippocampus, providing a negative feedback mechanism for
seizure
-induced kinases.
...
PMID:Kainate-elicited seizures induce mRNA encoding a CaMK-related peptide: a putative modulator of kinase activity in rat hippocampus. 1021 52
We describe clinical and neurophysiological findings in six related children with congenital microcephaly,
seizures
that began within the first 2-4 months of life, and severe mental retardation (MR). These affected children (five girls and one boy), born to two women who are half-sisters, inherited the disease as an autosomal recessive trait. Physical examination of these children did not show any of the anomalies in the known cortical malformation syndromes such as
lissencephaly
types I and II. Neuroradiological studies in these children documented microcephaly and a simplified gyral pattern with no pachygyria. Chromosomal analysis showed neither karyotypic abnormalities nor a microdeletion at 17p13.3, site of the
lissencephaly
type I gene locus (LIS1). Genetic studies failed to show linkage of this family to LIS1, LIS2 (a region on chromosome 2p homologous to LIS1), or MCPH1 (a locus for primary autosomal recessive microcephaly). The unique clinical and genetic findings in this family suggest that these children may be affected by an as-of-yet unmapped neuronal proliferation disorder.
...
PMID:Microcephaly with simplified gyral pattern in six related children. 1032 39
Lissencephaly
type I is a diffuse type of migration disorder that contains
agyria
and/or pachygyria on the brain surface. We experienced 5 cases of this disease and evaluated their electroencephalographic findings and
seizure
types based on the neuroradiological classification of
lissencephaly
. Ages at
seizure
onset ranged from 2 months to 4 months (mean 3.2 months). The patients with complete
agyria
had generalized tonic
seizures
, and those with pachygyria partial
seizures
or tonic spasms. The characteristic findings of complete
agyria
in electroencephalogram were high-voltage alfa activity. The amount of high-voltage slow waves increased with the ratio of pachygyria on the brain surface. The appearance of multifocal spikes and sharp waves suggested irregular arrangement of pachygyria on the brain surface.
...
PMID:[Lissencephaly type I: electroencephalographic findings and neuroradiological classification]. 1035 68
Lissencephaly
patients are born with severe brain malformations and suffer from recurrent
seizures
. LIS1, the gene mutated in isolated
lissencephaly
patients, is a subunit of the heterotrimeric cytosolic enzyme platelet-activating factor acetylhydrolase (PAF-AH), interacts with tubulin, and affects microtubule dynamics. In order to gain molecular insights into the possible involvement of LIS1 in
seizures
in
lissencephaly
patients, we induced
seizures
in rats by injection of kainate. PAF-AH activity was markedly reduced as early as 30 min following initiation of
seizures
, making this parameter a sensitive indicator of
seizure
events. PAF-AH activity returned to and surpassed control values 1 week following initiation of
seizures
. Expression of LIS1 in the dentate gyrus changed significantly in a manner similar to that of PAF-AH enzymatic activity. This is the first correlation found between LIS1 expression and PAF-AH activity. Furthermore, the expression of the alpha2 catalytic subunit, which is the major PAF-AH catalytic subunit in rat adult brain, changed in a dramatic fashion. An additional higher-mobility LIS1 cross-reactive band was detected in samples isolated a week following
seizure
occurrence. This LIS1 isoform was enriched in the microtubule-associated fraction. We propose that LIS1 expression is an important factor in regulation of PAF-AH activity. We postulate that reductions in LIS1 protein levels found in
lissencephaly
patients may render them more susceptible to
seizures
.
...
PMID:Platelet-activating factor (PAF) acetylhydrolase activity, LIS1 expression, and seizures. 1039 95
We report a patient with congenital muscular dystrophy (CMD), developmental brain defects, and peripheral neuropathy. Marked hypotonia and plagiocephaly were noted at birth. Failure to thrive, generalized muscle weakness and wasting, absent deep tendon reflexes, partial
seizures
, and secondary microcephaly developed. Brain MRI showed a large area of cortical dysplasia, a thin but complete corpus callosum, and diffuse ventriculomegaly. Nerve conduction velocities were slow and creatine kinase levels only mildly elevated. Muscle biopsy showed dystrophic features with normal merosin, sarcoglycan, and dystrophin immunostaining. The Japanese Fukuyama CMD founder mutation was not detected. This is the first report of a patient with merosin-positive CMD, cobblestone
lissencephaly
, and demyelinating peripheral neuropathy.
...
PMID:Congenital muscular dystrophy with central and peripheral nervous system involvement in a Belgian patient. 1039 53
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>