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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (seizures)
80,221 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Tumors and cortical dysplasia are associated with epilepsy, but few studies have examined the coexistence of neoplasia and dysplasia in these patients. We studied 13 patients (age 4-29 years) with recurrent seizures of 1 month to 21-year' duration (median 72 months). Ten patients were aged < 21 years. Imaging studies localized the lesion to the temporal lobe (10 patients), parietal lobe (2 patients), and frontal lobe (1 patient). Tumors included ganglioglioma (8 patients), dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumor (DNT) (3 patients), and low-grade astrocytoma (2 patients). Cortical dysplasia, including atypical aggregates of neurons (6 patients), multifocal loss of the cortical laminar architecture (7 patients), and neurons in the molecular layer of the cortex (3 patients) were observed near but separate from the tumor. Coexistence of certain tumors with cortical dysplasia, most frequently observed in the pediatric population, suggests a hamartomatous/dysplastic nature of the neoplasms.
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PMID:Coexistence of neoplasia and cortical dysplasia in patients presenting with seizures. 833 May 69

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies of 46 patients with West syndrome (WS) of unknown etiology were reviewed retrospectively. The criteria for cryptogenic WS were met by 25 and 21 were considered symptomatic because other types of seizure or psychomotor retardation were apparent before spasm onset. Computed tomographic (CT) scans were normal in 38 patients and showed diffuse atrophy in eight symptomatic patients. In five patients, MRI was more informative than CT, demonstrating one case of delayed myelination and four cases of focal lesion. The focal lesion in 2 of these patients was similar on MRI consisting of poor gray-white matter demarcation in the parieto-occipitotemporal region. Surgical resection was performed in one because of intractable seizures, and neuropathological examination revealed cortical dysplasia. The remaining two cases with focal lesion had increased signal intensity on T2-weighted images in the posterior frontal cortex and in the temporal lobe, respectively. Our data indicate that MRI is useful in some cases of WS, especially in demonstrating focal corticosubcortical lesions not visible on CT scan.
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PMID:Value of magnetic resonance imaging in West syndrome of unknown etiology. 833 May 81

Seventeen patients with cortical dysplasia who had surgical resection for medically intractable partial epilepsy were studied. Compared with two groups of surgically treated patients with intractable epilepsy due to tumour (n = 20) and mesial temporal sclerosis (n = 40), patients with cortical dysplasia showed significantly more frequent extratemporal lesions, more frequent non-epileptiform EEG abnormalities and less favourable surgical outcome for seizure control. Patients with cortical dysplasia were younger at onset of seizures and had a lower detection rate of CT abnormalities compared with the tumour group, and lower IQ compared with the mesial temporal sclerosis group. MRI was abnormal in five of seven patients. Six patients became seizure-free or almost seizure-free but eight did not experience relief of seizures. Surgical outcome related to the extent of pathology but not to the histological abnormality. Lesions outside the temporal and frontal lobes were correlated with poor surgical outcome, as were generalised interictal EEG abnormalities, which may reflect extensive or multiple lesions. Ictal intracranial recordings were not useful for presurgical evaluation of cortical dysplasia.
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PMID:Surgical treatment of epilepsy due to cortical dysplasia: clinical and EEG findings. 833 51

Centrifugal migration of newly generated neuroblasts toward the cortical surface can be arrested at different levels, resulting in anatomically different disorders. This is illustrated by three patients with diffuse or generalized neuronal migration disorders (NMDs): pachygyria, subcortical laminar heterotopia ('double-cortex' syndrome), and periventricular laminar heterotopia. All had medically intractable partial and generalized epileptic seizures, but there was no close correlation between the type of dysplasia and intelligence or clinical pattern. The low intelligence found in these patients may relate to the epileptic syndrome, rather than to the NMDs alone. MRI suggested that in this spectrum of disorders the migration process was arrested at different stages, depending on the extent, timing and site of damage to radial glial fibres.
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PMID:Stages and patterns of centrifugal arrest of diffuse neuronal migration disorders. 833 48

Forty patients with hypertelorism seen in the past 16 years were reviewed retrospectively. Combined intra- and extracranial surgical approach was used for 37 severe and moderate cases and subcranial approach (U-osteotomy) for 3 moderate cases. Gratifying results were obtained in patients with different types of hypertelorism by a multidisciplinary team. Complications were also reviewed. Of the 37 cases of intra- and extracranial corrections, 1 died, 4 had cerebrospinal fluid leakage and 4 had keratitis. No seizure, cerebral edema, meningitis, blindness, and ptosis occurred in this series. The average age was 13 years and two months. Operating time averaged 6 hours and 50 minutes. Hypertelorism was mostly attributable to craniofacial cleft, craniosynostosis, frontoethmoidal meningoencephalocele, frontonasal fibrous dysplasia, and trauma. Satisfactory esthetic appearance was achieved in most of the cases.
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PMID:Surgical correction of hypertelorism. Report of 40 cases. 840 75

To explore the electroclinical features of temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) in early childhood, we studied results of video-EEG and other tests of 14 children aged 16 months to 12 years selected by seizure-free outcome after temporal lobectomy. Four children had mesiotemporal sclerosis, 1 had cortical dysplasia, and 9 had low-grade temporal neoplasms. The children had complex partial seizures (CPS) with symptomatology similar to that of adults with TLE, including decreased responsiveness and automatisms. Automatisms tended to be simpler in the younger children, typically limited to lip smacking and fumbling hand gestures. Scalp/sphenoidal EEG showed anterior/inferior temporal interictal sharp waves and unilateral temporal seizure onset in the 4 children with mesiotemporal sclerosis and in the child with cortical dysplasia, but EEG findings in 9 children with low-grade temporal tumors were complex, including multifocal interictal sharp waves or poorly localized or falsely lateralized EEG seizure onset. In children without tumors, video-EEG was critical to localization of the epileptogenic zone for resection, but in patients with tumors video-EEG was less localizing and its main value was to confirm that the reported behaviors were epileptic seizures with semiology typical of temporal lobe onset.
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PMID:Temporal lobe epilepsy in early childhood. 840 38

Functional hemispherectomy, indicated for the control of pharmacologically refractory seizures, has been used at the Montreal Neurological Hospital since 1974. We have used this technique in 18 children suffering from intractable seizures secondary to conditions such as infantile hemiplegia, chronic encephalitis, head trauma, cerebrovascular accident, brain dysplasia and Sturge-Weber angiomatosis. None has developed superficial cerebral hemosiderosis often seen following the classical anatomical hemispherectomy. Eighty-two per cent (82%) of patients have been seizure-free since hospital discharge while another 11.5% have had at least 80% reduction in their seizure frequency. Most patients have shown an improvement in their intellectual capacity and sociability.
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PMID:Functional hemispherectomy in children. 847 13

A retrospective analysis was conducted of 9 children with focal cortical dysplasia and localization-related epilepsy who underwent epilepsy surgery. Focal cortical dysplasia includes malformed lesions with extensive abnormalities of neuronal morphology, architecture, and lamination. The patients were examined by EEG and video EEG telemetry, CT, MRI, and SPECT using 99mTc-HmPAO. EEG disclosed interictal localized epileptiform activity in 8 patients and nonepileptiform activity with slow waves in 1. Ictal EEG telemetry demonstrated a predominantly localized seizure onset in 8 patients and MRI demonstrated an abnormal loss of gray and white matter distinction in 6. Decreased regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) was detected in 4 patients by interictal SPECT, and increased rCBF in the same epileptogenic focus in 2 by postictal SPECT. Pathologic analysis found focal cortical dysplasia in 8 patients. One had extensive focal polymicrogyria, pachygyria, and extensive white matter heterotopias. It is concluded that MRI can detect focal cortical dysplasia, which corresponds to the epileptogenic focus on EEG, and SPECT may help to detect a functional abnormality in the same region.
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PMID:Focal cortical dysplasia in children with localization-related epilepsy: EEG, MRI, and SPECT findings. 849 37

We report a 10-year-old girl who presented with a single episode of partial complex seizure. Neurological examination and psychological evaluation were normal. Electroencephalogram showed abnormalities in the left temporo-occipital region. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed a bilateral layer of tissue iso-intense with gray matter, between the wall of the lateral ventricle and the cortex, extending from the frontal to the occipital region, and enlarged left lateral ventricle. The images indicated diffuse cortical dysplasia, also known as band heterotopia or "double cortex", and left cortical hemiatrophy.
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PMID:Neuronal migrational disorders: diffuse cortical dysplasia or the "double cortex" syndrome. 851 33

Anterior corpus callosotomy was performed in a patient with pseudobulbar palsy, mild mental retardation and intractable epilepsy related to congenital bilateral perisylvian cortical dysplasia. Before surgery, she had daily atonic drop attacks, rare and mainly sleep-related oromotor seizures, and multifocal and diffuse paroxysmal EEG discharges; after callosotomy, less abrupt atonic drop attacks recurred monthly and the EEG epileptiform abnormalities disappeared. Video-EEG sleep recordings revealed the clinically unsuspected serial recurrence of oromotor seizures, probably related to the clinically observed aggravation of dysarthria. New surgical techniques, in addition or alternative to callosotomy, should be developed in order to avoid or reduce the risk of aggravating some types of partial seizures in patients with bilateral cortical displastic lesions, intractable epilepsy and epileptic falls.
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PMID:Anterior corpus callosotomy: effects in a patient with congenital bilateral perisylvian syndrome and oromotor seizures. 853 19


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