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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (
seizures
)
80,221
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We present clinical, biochemical and cranial magnetic resonance imaging data of six pediatric patients with L-2-hydroxyglutaric aciduria. All the children have the same ethic origin and lived in the northern area of Portugal. Our findings reinforce the described phenotype of this rare metabolic disease with mental deficiency, severe cerebellar dysfunction, mild extrapyramidal and pyramidal symptoms, progressive macrocephaly and
seizures
. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed subcortical
leukoencephalopathy
, cerebellar atrophy and signal changes in the putamina and dentate nuclei. These were similar to those of the previous reports in all patients. The urinary excretion of L-2-hydroxyglutaric acid was variably increased in all patients. The other persistent biochemical abnormality was hyperlysinemia. We have found a strong correlation between the severity of the clinical manifestations and the extension of the lesions in the neuroimaging studies. There was no correlation between the clinical findings and the amount of urinary excretion of L-2-hydroxyglutaric acid. We report the second case in the literature of a cerebral thalamic tumor in L-2-hydroxyglutaric aciduria; neuropathological examination of the surgical biopsy demonstrated a diffuse fibrillary astrocytoma.
...
PMID:L-2-Hydroxyglutaric aciduria: clinical, biochemical and magnetic resonance imaging in six Portuguese pediatric patients. 918 77
Human recombinant erythropoietin is used to treat chronic anemia in patients with end-stage renal failure. Erythropoietin causes hypertension, and hypertensive encephalopathy has been associated with its use. We describe six dialysis-dependent, chronic renal failure patients who developed hypertension, headache, and
seizures
while on erythropoietin. Four of the six patients had posterior white matter changes on neuroimaging. The encephalopathy was managed by prompt antihypertensive and anticonvulsant treatment and by discontinuation of erythropoietin. Hypertensive posterior
leukoencephalopathy
is associated with erythropoietin use.
...
PMID:Erythropoietin-associated hypertensive posterior leukoencephalopathy. 971 75
FK506 is being used increasingly to prevent rejection after organ transplantation. Its use is associated with a wide spectrum of neurotoxicity, which has been described after most solid organ transplantations, but reports after lung transplantation are extremely rare. This is a report of the pathologic correlation of the clinical and radiologic features of delayed FK506-induced fulminant
leukoencephalopathy
after single-lung transplantation. The patient presented with neurologic symptoms that progressed to
seizure
activity. Neuroimaging showed diffuse changes in the brain, and results of a brain biopsy were consistent with
leukoencephalopathy
with microglial and astrocytic activation. The patient had a remarkable improvement in clinical status after discontinuation of FK506 administration, with resolution of the changes seen on neuroimaging.
...
PMID:FK506-induced fulminant leukoencephalopathy after single-lung transplantation. 938 23
With the advent of chemotherapy, mortality rates in acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) have decreased, but complications in the central nervous system have appeared. These include direct involvement of the brain itself and the development of chemotherapy-related encephalopathy as a delayed reaction. In most reported cases, this encephalopathy is believed to be due to necrotising angiitis arising from the combination of chemotherapy with adjuvant radiotherapy. We report the cases of four children with ALL who had been treated with high-dose intravenous and intrathecal chemotherapy but no radiation therapy, and who were admitted to hospital because of
seizures
. CT of the brain revealed the presence of diffuse periventricular white matter hypodensities in all cases and subcortical hyperdense foci in three cases. MRI showed diffuse hyperintense white matter lesions on T2-weighted images in all four patients; hypointense changes were observed on susceptibility-sensitive FLASH sequences in the hyperdense foci seen on CT as well as changes that were hyperintense on T1-weighted images. It was, therefore, concluded that the lesions corresponded to a
leukoencephalopathy
with calcific deposits. These findings are of a pure form of methotrexate encephalopathy causing
seizures
.
...
PMID:Pure methotrexate encephalopathy presenting with seizures: CT and MRI features. 947 50
Leukoencephalopathy
syndromes encompass a variety of neurologic abnormalities that affect cerebral white matter. Known etiologies include malignant hypertension, eclampsia, renal failure, CNS infection, and drug therapy with cyclosporine, tacrolimus (FK506) and interferon-alpha. Symptoms vary according to sites of involvement; they include altered mentation, visual disturbances, focal neurologic signs, and
seizures
. Characteristic radiologic findings are hypodense areas without contrast enhancement on CT and an increased T2 signal on MRI. The hypodense areas are often symmetric. The clinical symptoms and neuroimaging abnormalities are often reversible with treatment of the underlying condition or removal of the offending drug. We describe a patient with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma treated with conventional cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone (CHOP) chemotherapy and high-dose steroids who developed a rapidly progressive fatal
leukoencephalopathy
. Her neurologic symptoms and findings on CT are consistent with reported cases of
leukoencephalopathy
; however, in this instance, the syndrome was not reversible and was ultimately fatal. None of the previously described etiologies could be demonstrated in association with the patient's illness. There are no prior reports of fatal
leukoencephalopathy
in adult patients treated with standard-dose CHOP. We believe the concurrent immunosuppression from chemotherapy and high-dose steroids resulted in this patient's fatal complication.
...
PMID:Fatal leukoencephalopathy in a patient with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma treated with CHOP chemotherapy and high-dose steroids. 951 35
Organ transplantation has become a practical and effective option for patients with acute and/or chronic irreversible organ disease. However, solid organ transplantation is associated with many different complications which depend upon the specific surgical procedure and/or confounding medical problems (e.g. rejection, infection, adverse effect of immunosuppressive agents) experienced by a given patient. Tacrolimus and cyclosporin A are immunosuppressive drugs used to prevent rejection following allogeneic solid organ transplantation. Adverse events are common with both drugs and include long-term organ dysfunction, opportunistic infections, haematopoietic alterations, nephrotoxicity and neurotoxicity. Neurological complications, both central and peripheral, occur in 10-42% of transplant recipients using either of these two immunosuppressive agents. Two cases of reversible posterior
leukoencephalopathy
manifested by headache, nausea and
seizures
associated with the use of immunosuppressive drugs following liver transplantation are reported.
...
PMID:Immunosuppressive drug-induced leukoencephalopathy in patients with liver transplant. 961 93
The association of an acute reversible encephalopathy with transient occipital lobe abnormalities on imaging studies is well known. This condition has been called reversible posterior
leukoencephalopathy
syndrome. The clinical presentation usually includes
seizures
, headache, altered mental status, and blindness, often associated with hypertension and immunosuppressants. The authors discuss a two-year-old male with Down syndrome who presented 2 months after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation with severe oculogyric crisis, without other complaints. The patient was being treated for hypertension and was receiving cyclosporine for prophylaxis of graft-vs-host disease. A computed tomography scan of the head revealed marked bilateral lucencies mainly involving the white matter of the occipital lobes, with a few foci of punctate hemorrhage. The condition improved when cyclosporine was discontinued, but an area of leukomalacia was identified on follow-up magnetic resonance imaging. To the authors' knowledge, oculogyric crisis as a presentation of reversible posterior
leukoencephalopathy
has not been previously described. Recognizing this association is important, because patients receiving cyclosporine are often receiving other medications that can potentially cause dystonic eye movements, possibly leading to a delay in diagnosis and treatment, which can result in an irreversible neurologic deficit.
...
PMID:Posterior leukoencephalopathy syndrome may not be reversible. 1020 37
Visual hallucinations are commonly associated with
seizures
, drug effects, psychiatric disorders, or visual loss as 'release' phenomena. We report the case of a previously healthy 65-year-old woman, who was admitted to hospital with intermittent headache episodes accompanied by complex visual hallucinations. During these episodes the patient's blood pressure was 220/120 mmHg. In between symptomatic episodes she had no complaints and felt healthy. The neurological and ophthalmological examinations were normal but cerebral magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed multiple white matter abnormalities in the parieto-occipital regions. Rapid reversal of the symptoms and imaging abnormalities occurred concurrently with lowering of blood pressure. The history and the findings were similar to those recently described in the clinicoradiological 'posterior
leukoencephalopathy
' syndrome. Different pathogenic mechanisms are discussed. Copyright 1998 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
...
PMID:Visual hallucinations in a case of reversible hypertension-induced brain oedema. 1021 Aug 99
Children with hypertension,
seizures
, lethargy, encephalopathy, headache, and occipital blindness are reviewed. After undergoing antihypertensive therapy, most children improve. Some patients have a similar syndrome associated with chemotherapy, transplantation, transfusion, or human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) infection. These latter children can develop symptoms with only minimal or no discernible elevations in blood pressure and improve, in the case of cancer-associated encephalopathy, after discontinuing chemotherapy. The reported children with this distinctive clinical condition are compared to adults with reversible posterior
leukoencephalopathy
syndrome. Since both gray and white matter are involved, we had suggested previously that the name be changed to (reversible) occipitoparietal encephalopathy syndrome. However, reversible posterior
leukoencephalopathy
has been used in the adult population and probably should be employed in children for the sake of uniformity, since both children and adults have the same clinical presentation and presumably a similar pathophysiology for the encephalopathy syndrome. The diagnosis is confirmed by reversible posterior abnormalities seen on T2-weighted brain magnetic resonance imaging, and by the presence of either headache, altered mental status,
seizures
, or visual disturbances.
...
PMID:Hypertensive encephalopathy, reversible occipitoparietal encephalopathy, or reversible posterior leukoencephalopathy: three names for an old syndrome. 1034 93
Cyclosporin A (CsA) induces neurological side effects in up to 40% of patients. A reversible posterior
leukoencephalopathy
syndrome is the most serious complication. Symptoms include headache, altered mental functioning,
seizures
, cortical blindness, and other visual disturbances, with hypertension. Neuroimaging studies show white matter changes in the posterior regions of the brain. Other neurological side effects of CsA include tremor, diffuse encephalopathy, cerebellar syndrome, extrapyramidal syndrome, pyramidal weakness, and peripheral neuropathy. Hypertension, hypomagnesemia, hypocholesteremia, and the vasoactive agent endothelin may all play a role in the pathogenesis of CsA neurotoxicty. Neurotoxicity is more frequent with high CsA blood levels, but levels may be within the therapeutic range. Dose reduction or withdrawal of CsA usually results in resolution of clinical symptoms and of neuroimaging abnormalities.
...
PMID:Cyclosporine neurotoxicity: a review. 1039 63
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