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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (
seizures
)
80,221
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We found marked accumulation of glycogen in the brain in one case of the cerebro-hepato-renal syndrome (CHRS). Glycogen in the form of beta-particles was deposited freely within the nucleus, perikaryon and cell processes of neurons and glial cells. The changes involved the gray matter diffusely but were more prominent in the cerebral cortex. The patient died at the age of 4 months after a clinical course characterized by severe hypotonia,
seizures
, and apneic episodes. Other neuropathologic findings were developmental malformations of the central nervous systen (CNS) (
pachygyria
, polymicrogyria, and hypoplasia of the inferior olives), white matter abnormalities (deficiency in myelination and diffuse accumulation of sudanophilic droplets within glial cells), clusters of peculiar "globoid" histiocytes with pleomorphic lipid inclusions, and microglial nodules in gray and white matter. This unusual combination of findings is regarded as characteristic of the CHRS.
...
PMID:Glycogen accumulation in the central nervous system in the cerebro-hepato-renal syndrome. Report of a case with ultrastructural studies. 43 58
A clinico-pathological report is given on 4 cases of agyria (premature neonate to age 13 months), 3 cases of
pachygyria
(aged 2,5 to 4,3 years) and a boy aged 4,5 years with temporal
pachygyria
and frontal microgyrias. Clinical features, more pronounced in agyria than in
pachygyria
, were microcephaly, frequent facial anomalies, neonatal feeding difficulties, hypotonia with subsequent
seizures
, hypsarrhythmic EEG pattern in 3 children, arrest of psychomotor development and signs of decerebration. One case of agyria occurred with familial faciorenal dysplasia, two were associated with congenital heart disease, and the fourth with chromosomal abnormality. Morphologically, the colpocephalic brain showed a four-layered agyric pallium with radially aligned cell columns and periventricular heterotopias, lacking differentiation of the claustra, olivary heterotopias and cerebellar dysgenesias in the 4 younger infants. In the agyric neonate additional agenesis of corpus callosum was present. Pachygyric brains showed a six-layered cortex, periventricular heterotopias, lacking differentiation of the claustra, but no cerebello-olivary anomalies. Cytoarchitectonic analysis of the agyric cortex suggests a disorder of neuronal migration during stage III of neocortex formation (Rakic and Sidman) between the 11th and 13th fetal week, while the pachygyric cortex showing the later formed layers II and IV presumable is caused by an attenuated and later disorder acting in early stage IV of neocortex formation, i. e. around or after the 13th fetal week. Additional insula-claustrum dysplasia, olivary and cerebellar anomalies are due to concomittent migration disorders between the 11th and 14th week. Along this period there is a gradient from agyric to normal six-layered cortex, whereas microgyria presumably results from an event occurring after migration has terminated (after the 16th fetal week). Etiological factors of agyria-
pachygyria
may be both hereditary (familial lissencephaly-syndrome) and environmental ones (prenatal drug application or intrauterine perfusion disorders).
...
PMID:Agyria-pachygyria (lissencephaly syndrome). 98 18
In this paper, we describe a baby male born to healthy non-consanguineous parents presenting at birth with hypotonia and
seizures
. Additional salient clinical features included the development of glaucoma, the absence of significant facial dysmorphism and the absence of liver enlargement or renal cysts. The patient died at the age of 3 months. At autopsy, liver fibrosis and kidney glomerulosclerosis were noted. Neuropathological findings included
pachygyria
of the olivary nuclei and cerebellar neuronal heterotopias. There was no evidence for a demyelinating process. Biochemically, the patient was found to have elevated plasma levels of very-long-chain fatty acids (VLCFA) and abnormal bile acid intermediates, whereas other indicators of peroxisomal function (plasmalogen biosynthesis and plasma pipecolic acid) were normal. Catalase staining of a liver biopsy specimen revealed peroxisomes to be present in normal numbers, although some were abnormally large. Trilamellar inclusions typical of a peroxisomal fatty acid oxidation defect were present in macrophages. Indeed, beta-oxidation of the very-long-chain fatty acid hexacosanoic acid (C26:0) was found to be strongly deficient. Fatty acyl-CoA oxidase activity in the patient's liver was normal, however. Furthermore immunocytochemical studies using antibodies against acyl-CoA oxidase, bifunctional protein and peroxisomal thiolase, revealed the normal localization of all three enzyme proteins within the peroxisomes. We suggest that our patient has a selective peroxisomal beta-oxidation defect, a recently identified heterogeneous group of early-onset peroxisomal disorders distinct from the Zellweger syndrome and other generalized peroxisomal disorders.
...
PMID:Neonatal seizures and severe hypotonia in a male infant suffering from a defect in peroxisomal beta-oxidation. 148 48
An 18-year-old mentally normal epileptic boy had frequent left brachiofacial or unilateral motor
seizures
which started at age 4 years and ceased 10 years later.
Seizures
were exclusively sleep-related. No relapse followed antiepileptic drug (AED) discontinuation. Left arm slight paresis and left hand astereognosia occurred at age 10 years. Awake EEGs showed persistent right rolandic discharges increased by sleep. Somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) were giant with left median nerve stimulation. Computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) disclosed right opercular
macrogyria
. We suggest that the structural brain lesion was causally related to his "idiopathic" partial epilepsy. Similar case reports and pathologic studies will elucidate the morphologic substrate of the underlying functional disorder in idiopathic partial epilepsies.
...
PMID:Unilateral opercular macrogyria and benign childhood epilepsy with centrotemporal (rolandic) spikes: report of a case. 159 27
We report of 16 year old twinsisters with a neuronal migration disorder, twin I with mental retardation and focal epileptic
seizures
on MRI showed general
pachygyria
, laminar subcortical heterotopia and mildly dilated lateral ventricles, whereas twin II whose first symptom was a cerebral
seizure
only showed a focal
pachygyria
and laminar subcortical heterotopia; the location of
pachygyria
corresponded to the epileptogenic focus. The morphological expression seems to correspond with the severeness of the clinical features. Genetic as well as exogenic factors must be assumed to be causative for the migration anomalies.
...
PMID:[Pachygyria and laminar heterotopic tissue. A rare case of unique expression of a neuronal migration disorder in twins]. 161 47
We studied 30 patients with partial epilepsy and a radiological or pathological diagnosis of localized neuronal migration disorders, with a view to surgical treatment. Eight patients had identifiable prenatal etiological factors. The frequency of complex partial, partial motor, and secondarily generalized
seizures
was approximately 70% each. Drop attacks were present in 27%: Their presence usually correlated with a lesion involving the central region. Partial motor or generalized convulsive status epilepticus occurred in 30%, and was most frequently associated with extensive structural abnormalities involving two or more lobes. A full-scale intelligence quotient of less than 80 was found in 44%. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was superior to computed tomography for identification of the dysplastic cortical lesions. In one third, MRI showed only subcortical abnormalities. It did not allow distinction between true
pachygyria
, focal cortical dysplasia, or the forme fruste of tuberous sclerosis. The epileptogenic area was usually more extensive than the lesion; it was multilobar in more than 70% of patients. Of 26 surgically treated patients, a histological diagnosis of the type of neuronal migration disorder was possible in 22: 12 had focal cortical dysplasia and 10 the forme fruste of tuberous sclerosis. In the remaining 4, no definite histological diagnosis was made, since the maximally abnormal tissue could not be examined. In the latter, and in the 4 nonoperated patients, the diagnosis of neuronal migration disorder was based on imaging findings. The presence of the forme fruste of tuberous sclerosis correlated with delayed psychomotor development and more extensive epileptogenic areas.
...
PMID:Focal neuronal migration disorders and intractable partial epilepsy: a study of 30 patients. 178 91
Lissencephaly type I has been described as either the cerebral expression of a complex malformation syndrome such as Miller-Dieker syndrome (MDS), or as isolated lissencephaly sequence (ILS). In a nation-wide study in The Netherlands, of 21 patients with lissecephaly type I, four were found to have MDS and 17 ILS. New clinical aspects were as follows: the mean life-span of the entire group was longer than previously reported; patients with lissencephaly grades 3 or 4 (mixture of agyria and
pachygyria
, or complete
pachygyria
) developed
seizures
later than those with grades 1 and 2 (complete and almost complete agyria); microcephaly was not always present in patients with grades 3 and 4 lissencephaly; and patients with lissencephaly grades 1 and 2 had hardly any psychomotor development, while those with grades 3 and 4 were severely retarded.
...
PMID:Diagnostic features and clinical signs of 21 patients with lissencephaly type 1. 221 85
The neuronal migration disorders comprise several morphological entities that are recognizable during life using current imaging techniques. We studied 4 patients who had a characteristic bilateral central rolandic and sylvian
macrogyria
. The patients had pseudobulbar palsy with oromotor incoordination and developmental delay and were mildly retarded. Minor
seizures
developed between the ages of 8 and 9 years. Subsequently, atonic drop attacks became the predominant epileptic pattern. Epileptogenic electrographic abnormalities were secondary generalized or multifocal. The lesions were detected by computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging in all patients. Bilateral symmetrical areas of thick cortex surrounding a large sulcus were seen. This syndrome consists of specific clinical, imaging, electroencephalographic, and epileptic features. It can be suspected clinically and confirmed by imaging studies. Callosotomy in two patients helped the intractable
seizures
.
...
PMID:Bilateral central macrogyria: epilepsy, pseudobulbar palsy, and mental retardation--a recognizable neuronal migration disorder. 212 85
We observed 4 children with hemimegalencephaly, (3 boys, 1 girl aged 3-7 years). One child had a linear sebaceous nevus. All patients had a similar clinical, EEG, and neuroradiologic pattern. All patients had macrocrania, hemiparesis, hemianopsia, and psychomotor retardation of variable degree. All cases had an epileptic syndrome with onset during the first days or the first months of life. The
seizures
were consistently similar: partial motor
seizures
, generally hemiclonic and asymmetric brief tonic
seizures
, in series, involving predominantly one side of the body, contralateral to the cerebral damage. The EEG was initially characterized by a hemihypsarrhythmia and afterward, over the malformed hemisphere, by a rather high-frequency background activity associated with almost continuous transients of spikes, sharp waves, and spike and waves that progressively involved the contralateral hemisphere. Hemispherectomy was performed in two children with sudden and complete recovery from
seizures
and improvement in psychomotor development. Macroscopic examination was consistent with the computed tomography (CT) scan and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showing
pachygyria
and poorly represented white matter. Histologic examination showed the characteristic absence of cortical neuronal layering, and the presence of giant neurons, neuronal heterotopias, and gliosis. For hemispherectomy to be successful, we believe prolonged EEG monitoring is needed to verify that no
seizures
are originating in the normal hemisphere.
...
PMID:Hemimegalencephaly and intractable epilepsy: benefits of hemispherectomy. 259 46
The migrational disorders are a rare group of congenital malformations of the brain. They consist of the following entities--lissencephaly (agyria-
pachygyria
),
pachygyria
, schizencephaly, heterotopia and polymicrogyria. We studied 40 children with migrational disorders radiologically with CT and MR. This article (part I) deals with our patients their characteristic CT and MR findings along with their clinical presentation and course. These patients presented with one or a combination of the following symptoms, hypotonia,
seizures
, failure to thrive, microcephaly and occasionally hydrocephalus. These two groups of migrational disorders have abnormalities affecting the gyral-sulcal pattern of the cortex and gray-white matter distribution of the brain. MR provided better delineation of these disorders than CT. Because some forms of the migrational disorders can be inherited, it is extremely important for the radiologist to understand the characteristic findings for correct diagnosis which is essential for parental counseling.
...
PMID:The CT and MR evaluation of migrational disorders of the brain. Part I. Lissencephaly and pachygyria. 271 49
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