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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (
seizures
)
80,221
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Migration anomalies are congenital malformations caused by insults to migrating neuroblasts during the third to fifth gestational months. Included in this group are agyria, pachygyria, polymicrogyria, unilateral megalencephaly, schizencephaly, and gray matter heterotopias. Patients who have these conditions present clinically with
developmental delay
and
seizures
, and abnormal motor skills are noted in the more severely affected infants. To determine the utility of MR as a method for imaging in these patients, we used MR to evaluate 13 patients who had the full spectrum of migration anomalies. MR was more sensitive than CT in detecting these anomalies because of its better contrast between gray and white matter. We found that MR was particularly more sensitive in detecting schizencephaly, where recognizing the presence of gray matter lining the cleft is critical to distinguishing that disease from porencephaly, and in detecting polymicrogyria, where critical details of cortical architecture are obscured on CT by the overlying bone. Multiplanar capabilities were also found to be essential, since narrow clefts may not be detected when the imaging plane is parallel to the cleft. MR should be the primary imaging method for infants who have
seizures
or
developmental delay
.
...
PMID:MR of neuronal migration anomalies. 325 18
MR imaging was used to evaluate six patients who had schizencephaly, a disorder of cell migration characterized by holohemispheric, gray-matter-lined clefts. Clinically, these patients presented with intractable
seizures
and variable
developmental delay
. Although three of these patients had previous CT scans, the diagnosis was made only by MR. MR was more sensitive than CT in detecting the clefts as well as the accompanying abnormalities, including areas of pachygyria, polymicrogyria, and heterotopic gray matter. The possible pathogenesis of schizencephaly is discussed. MR provides excellent demonstration of the anatomic changes in schizencephaly.
...
PMID:MR imaging of schizencephaly. 325 84
Urine sialic acid was measured in 246 patients evaluated for possible neurodegenerative disorders. Total, free, and bound sialic acid excretion declined significantly with patients' ages. Among 11 patients (4.5%) with age-related excretion rates greater than 2 standard deviations above the mean, 5 had the following disorders: free sialic acid storage disease, mucolipidosis type II, pseudohypoparathyroidism, sinus histiocytosis, and probable Sanfilippo syndrome. Although the remaining 6 were undiagnosed, 2 exhibited deteriorating courses and the other 4 presented variable combinations of organomegaly,
developmental delay
or mental retardation,
seizures
, facial dysmorphism, or bony abnormalities. Thus, these individuals also may have metabolic disorders with abnormal excretions of sialic acid-containing compounds. With awareness of age-related excretion rates, sialic acid screening is most useful for the sialidoses, mucolipidoses, and disorders of free sialic acid metabolism.
...
PMID:Urinary sialic acid screening in neurologic disorders. 350 81
To identify etiologic factors and ophthalmologic diagnoses related to visual impairment in young infants, a survey was carried out within the 22 school districts providing educational services to all visually impaired infants, birth to 3 years of age, in Harris County, Texas. Review of 102 records revealed that 51 percent had impaired vision associated with prenatal factors, and 31 percent were associated with perinatal events. The most frequent ophthalmologic diagnoses were lesions of the optic nerve, optic pathway, and visual centers of the brain (cortical blindness). A majority of the infants had multiple handicaps: 17 percent had hearing loss, 48 percent had cerebral palsy, 46 percent had
seizures
, and 78 percent had severe
developmental delay
. The high incidence of multiple handicaps and significant medical problems indicates the necessity for interface between physicians and educators who serve the visually impaired infant.
...
PMID:Visually impaired infants in the 1980s. A survey of etiologic factors and additional handicapping conditions in a school population. 356 28
The case of a 5-month-old black female child with a linear sebaceous naevus syndrome and multiple congenital anomalies is presented. Ocular malformations consisted of colobomatous changes of the lid and retina, dermoid of the conjunctiva, chorioretinal changes, and peripapillary atrophy of the optic nerve. Systemic findings included midline cleft of the secondary palate with involvement by the naevus, bilateral hearing loss, asymmetrical skull bones, ventricular septal defect, epidermal inclusion cyst, and
developmental delay
without
seizures
.
...
PMID:Ocular findings in linear sebaceous naevus syndrome. 358 Mar 38
The purpose of this study was to determine which clinical characteristics correlated with abnormal computed tomographic (CT) scans in epileptic children. Thirty variables were examined. Of these, four variables (presence of inherited or congenital disease, focal motor findings,
developmental delay
, and early onset of
seizures
) correlated with CT scan outcome. Partial seizures per se were not highly associated with abnormal CT scans. A crude decision rule based on these results correctly classified the CT scan result in 94% of the patients who were clinically predicted not to have a parenchymal abnormality.
...
PMID:Clinical predictors of computed tomography in epileptic children. 359 20
Cephalic neural crest cells contribute to the formation of the external and middle ears, the supporting cells of the statoacoustic ganglion, other cranial nerve components, and the face. The anlage of otic sensory structures receive inductive stimuli from adjacent rhombencephalic tissue. The complex series of interactions that guide organogenesis of the outer, middle, and inner ear structures may explain why neurologic dysfunction is likely to be associated with malformations of the ear. We reviewed the records of 100 patients with complex ear anomalies with or without hearing loss. Mean age was 4.2 years (range 1 day-27 years). Malformations, either bilateral (70) or unilateral (30), involved the external ear (94), middle ear (16), and/or inner ear (12). Eighty-five patients had neurologic dysfunction. Cranial nerve dysfunction was found in 56 patients and involved nerves VIII (39 auditory and/or vestibular), VII (22), II (11), VI (8), V (4), III (3), X (3), XII (1), and IX (1). Sixty-four patients had evidence of central nervous system dysfunction such as mental deficiency/
developmental delay
(44), non-paretic gait disorders (17), hypotonia (16), microcephaly (13),
seizures
(8), motor deficits (8), autistic features (7), and radiographically confirmed intracranial abnormalities (5). Eleven of 19 children with hypoactive vestibules had delayed motor development or poor balance. Seventy-four patients had anomalies in other organ systems: 56 craniofacial, 28 osseous, 19 cardiac, 16 genito-urinary, 14 ocular, 11 gastrointestinal, and 7 cutaneous. Sixty-one patients had syndromic conditions, 32 of them branchial arch syndromes. The level of cognitive competence was not related to severity of craniofacial, ear, or cranial nerve abnormality. Children with ear malformations deserve neurologic and pediatric evaluations in addition to an otologic work-up.
...
PMID:Neurologic findings in children with ear malformations. 362 8
Fifteen patients with deletion of proximal 15q without typical Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) have been reported previously [Schwartz et al, 1985]. We report on 2 additional patients without typical PWS found to have deletions of 15q11-13 on chromosome analysis done for evaluation of
developmental delay
. Their manifestations include broad nasal bridge with telecanthus, full nasal tip with flare of nasal alae, long upper lip, posteriorly angulated ears, highly arched palate, hypotonia,
seizures
and marked
developmental delay
. It was suggested that there may be a specific phenotype associated with this deletion which differs from PWS. Whether this deletion differs from the deletion associated with PWS awaits delineation on a molecular level.
...
PMID:Deletions of proximal 15q without Prader-Willi syndrome. 368 19
We present findings on an infant with neonatal megaloblastic anemia, homocystinuria, and neurologic dysfunction that included
developmental delay
and tonic
seizures
. There was no methylmalonic aciduria. Cyanocobalamin therapy was accompanied by complete hematologic and neurologic recovery, diminished homocystine excretion, and subsequently normal neurologic development. Cultured fibroblasts and lymphoblasts showed a reduced methionine synthase activity and a growth requirement for methionine. Cobalamin incorporation by the patient's lymphoblasts was normal, but the proportion of cellular methylcobalamin in the patient's lymphoblasts and fibroblasts were markedly reduced and that of adenosylcobalamin normal. The reduced methionine synthase activity was independent of assay reducing (thiol) conditions, but normal levels of activity accompanied culture of the patient's lymphoblasts in medium with markedly increased cobalamin concentration. The characteristics of the reduced methionine synthase of our patient differ significantly from that of the previously described infant with cobalamin E disease and suggest that genetic heterogeneity may characterize this mutation.
...
PMID:Vitamin B12-responsive neonatal megaloblastic anemia and homocystinuria with associated reduced methionine synthase activity. 382 32
We reviewed the natural history and differential diagnosis of ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency (an X-linked inborn error of urea synthesis) in 13 symptomatic female heterozygotes. The patients presented as early as the first week of life or as late as the sixth year. The most common symptoms before diagnosis were nonspecific: episodic extreme irritability (100 percent), episodic vomiting and lethargy (100 percent), protein avoidance (92 percent), ataxia (77 percent), Stage II coma (46 percent), delayed physical growth (38 percent),
developmental delay
(38 percent), and
seizures
(23 percent). Including the proband, 42 percent of the female members of the 13 families studied had symptoms. The median interval between the onset of major symptoms (vomiting and lethargy,
seizures
, and coma) and diagnosis was 16 months (range, 1 to 142). Five patients had IQ scores below 70 at the time of diagnosis. We suggest that careful evaluation of the family history, the dietary history, the episodic nature of the nonspecific symptoms, the response of these symptoms to the withdrawal of protein, and their frequent onset at the time of weaning from breast milk will permit early diagnosis and might thereby reduce the risk of death or neurologic impairment in female patients with partial ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency.
...
PMID:Natural history of symptomatic partial ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency. 394 92
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