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

The clinical and biochemical data on 13 patients with Batten's syndrome are described. Clinically the disease was characterized by progressive maental and somatic deterioration. Initially, vision loss was found between the ages 4 and 8 years. This was associated with 1 or 2 years of normal school attendance followed by attendance at a school for mentally retarded from the age of 8 to 11; then warding was established at a school for blind children and later on a hospital for epileptic patients when seizures and mental retardation made hospitalization necessary. Biochemically, an increased peroxidation rate was revealed in peripheral thrombocytes. This abnormality was associated with a significant decrease in peroxidase activity of leucocytes assayable with p-phenylenediamine, but not with Guajacol. The peroxidase defect seemed to concern an azide-resistant peroxidase. However, in serum the glutathione peroxidase was only found insignificantly decreased.
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PMID:Clinical, social and biochemical studies on Batten's syndrome, alias Spielmeyer-Vogot or Stengel's Syndrome. 87 40

Similar movement disorders developed in two 8-year-old retarded children while they were receiving phenytoin. Seizures subsequent to a diphtheria-pertussis-tetanus immunization had developed in each child at 1 to 2 months of age. A static encephalopathy ensued, characterized by mental retardation, ataxia, spasticity, and a mixed seizure disorder. Intermittent dystonia and choreoathetosis developed insidiously while serum phenytoin concentrations were in the therapeutic range. Sustained dystonia and choreoatheosis developed 2 hours after an oral provocation with phenytoin. The baseline abnormalities on the electroencephalogram remained unchanged during the choreoathetosis. Recognizable metabolic abnormalities known to be associated with similar movement disorders were excluded. It was concluded from these studies that the movement disorder is secondary to phenytoin and can occur at therapeutic serum concentrations. Phenytoin is a central anticholinergic agent and a central stimulant of serotonin, and may induce movement disorders as a result of altering these neurotransmitters in the brain. The variable expression of these movement disorders may relate to the nature of the preexisting striatal insult.
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PMID:Phenytoin-induced dystonia and choreoathetosis in two retarded epileptic children. 94 1

The long-term prognosis of 185 children with epilepsy, who continued to attend the Clinic for Epileptic Children, the Department of Pediatrics, the University of Tokyo, beyond the age of 18 years, was reported. The length of follow-up varied from three to 20 years, but most of them were followed longer than 10 years. The presumed etiology in these children was divided into a cryptogenic group (124, 67.0%) and a symptomatic group (61). The types of seizures were classified into grand mal (86 cases), focal seizure (27), petit mal absence (4), psychomotro seizure (5), infantile spasms (7), and so on. It may be noted that the highest frequency of grand mal was demonstrated, while the incidences of infantile spasms, myoclonic seizure, and akinetic seizure were low in the series. Only 28 children (15.1%) had complications of physical and/or mental handicaps. The follow-up study revealed that 140 patients (75.7%) had been seizure-free in the last 12 months. One hundred and fifteen of them had no seizures for five years or longer. On the other hand, electroencephalographic abnormalities generally continued for a long time after disappearance of seizures. Eightly-one of well-controlled patients were gradually decreasing the doses of anticonvulsants. As for seizure types, it is noted that focal seizure, psychomotor seizure, and infantile spasms were relatively difficult to be controlled. Except for 27 patients, most of them attended normal schools, including junior colleges or universities, and engaged in various occupations. Fifteen female patients had already married, and out of 13 babies who were born from these patients, there were one with ventricular septal defect, one with mental deficiency, and one with anencephaly, while the rest were entirely normal. Additional problems on withdrawal of anticonvulsants after a long-term seizure-free period, and what a medical system should be for treatment of epilepsy in children up to their adulthood were discussed.
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PMID:Long-term prognosis of epilepsy in children--a follow-up report beyond 18 years of age. 99 13

In a prospective study of 130 infants with neonatal convulsions, the frequency and type of epilepsy and the relationship between the presumptive etiology of neonatal convulsions and subsequent epilepsy were investigated in 82 survivors exclouding those dying and lost to follow-up. Of these 82 children, 15 (18.2%) were found to have epilepsy, which was of generalized type in seven (8.5%), infantile spasm in four (4.9%), focal seizures in three (3.6%) and myoclonic seizures in one (1.2%). Febrile convulf neonatal convulsions were asphyxia, intracranial hemorrhage or neonatal meningitides in most instances, but no particular relationship was noted between the presumptive etiology of neonatal convulsions and the type of subsequent epilepsy. In 11 (73.3%) of the 15 epileptic children, convurrent mental retardation, cerebral palsy and postmeningitic hydrocephalus were noted. Evidence from RI cisternography, pneumoencephalography and cerebral angiography indicated that perinatal or neonatal brain damage responsible for epilepsy might be organic in nature. The fact that epilepsy occurred later in many of cases of neonatal convulsions of unidentified etiology suggests that brain damage incurred during fetal life might also be implicated at least in some instances. The onset of epilepsy in this series was relatively early, invariably before three years of age.
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PMID:A prospective study of epilepsy following neonatal convulsions. 99 20

A large cirsoid aneurysm of the scalp that was present since birth in a 1 1/2 year old baby is reported. For six months the patient had been suffering from generalized seizures and mental retardation. After excision of the aneurysm, the patient became seizure free.
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PMID:A large cirsoid aneurysm of the scalp associated with epilepsy. 99 4

Hypochondroplasia is a hereditary form of short-limbed dwarfism which somewhat resembles achondroplasia, but which is clinically, roentgenographically, and genetically distinct. The pertinent findings in 6 new cases are: moderate rhizomelic shortness of stature; normal craniofacial appearance and hand configuration; and later recognition of the presence of the abnormality than in achondroplasia (which can be recognized at birth). A review of the 35 previously described cases in the literature reveals a preponderance of affected females and a high incidence of spontaneous mutation, although when once evident the trait is passed as an autosomal dominant. Two of our patients had seizures, and mental deficiency may be an associated finding although it is by no means usually present. Orthopedists should be aware of this entity, which may be somewhat more common than has been thought, because of the different implications for ultimate height, which is greater in hypochondroplasia than in achondroplasia, the lack of cauda equina compression findings, and the need for genetic counseling.
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PMID:Hypochondroplasia. 109 22

Acute hemiplegia of obscure cause occurred in 28 children: 13 had had prolonged seizures and a high temperature (considered to have been the direct cause of the brain damage); 5 had had brief seizures, a lower temperature and a depressed level of consciousness; and 10 had a nonfebrile onset of hemiplegia and were found to have vascular abnormalities. Most of the first group were retarded and epileptic at long-term follow-up, as were about half of the second group, whereas children in the third group were of normal intelligence and epilepsy was uncommon among them. Hemiplegia persisted at follow-up in most of the children in each group, the proportion being at least in the third group; if cerebral angiography had demonstrated carotid stenosis or occlusion there was usually poor recovery from the hemiplegia. Bilateral changes on plain skull films or pneumoencephalograms were associated with mental retardation. Failure to control prolonged seizures accompanied by a high temperature predisposes to brain damage; therefore, early and vigorous management is essential.
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PMID:Acute hemiplegia of childhood. 114 81

The hypothesis that specific defects in synaptic and dendritic development of cerebral cortex may form the anatomical basis in some cases of mental defect has been examined by electron microscopy and by use of the Golgi-Cos method. Two types of abnormality have been identified to date. One is a specific lesion of presynaptic terminals, first reported by Gonatas and Goldensohn (14) in a child with mental retardation and myoclonic seizures. This lesion, consisting of massive proliferation of membranous structures in terminal axons, appears to be rare and may be the anatomical substrate of one or more genetically determined dementing illnesses in infancy. More commonly, cerebral cortex from the severely retarded shows defects in number, length, and spatial arrangement of dendrites and synapses, best demonstrated by the Golgi method. Such abnormalities have been found in six out of eleven brains from severely retarded individuals examined by us. The etiology of the retardation was unknown in the majority; two had other recognizable developmental malformations of brain. It is suggested that a number of different etiological factors, if active during the period of rapid synaptic and dendritic growth in cerebral cortex (i. e., from the last trimester of pregnancy to the end of the first postnatal year) may result in stunted development of these structures.
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PMID:Snyaptic and dendritic development and mental defect. 119 9

The premise of this review is that chronobiology, the science of biologic time structure and rhythms, is important in investigations concerning the etiology, mechanisms and effects of deficient mental adaptive development. Chronobiology is also shown to have potential importance in therapeutics and rehabilitation. Most of the information available now and supporting this wide-spread relevance of chronobiology relates to circadian rhythms, but physiological and behavioral rhythms having other cycle lengths also contribute. Recent findings in seven topic areas of chronobiology are reviewed with emphasis on facts and relationships actually or potentially important for consideration in mental retardation research. These are: 1) development of sleep and EEG patterns; 2) rhythmic susceptibility to seizures; 3) adrenocortical and dependent rhythms; 4) circadian rhythms in amino acids and biogenic amines; 5) rhythmic behaviors; 6) circadian rhythms in susceptibility and responses to drugs; and 7) circadian rhythms in human perception and performance.
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PMID:Chronobiology in mental retardation research: progress and prospects. 121 6

The authors describe a 25-year-old woman with giant axonal neuropathy (GAN) and severe CNS involvement. She had been admitted to hospital with generalized seizures, and had gait disturbances followed by progressive mental deterioration since childhood. Neurological examination revealed mental retardation, scanning speech, cerebellar dysfunction, pyramidal signs, mainly in the lower extremities, and peripheral sensory neuropathy. Sensory nerve conduction velocity was decreased; brain CT and MRI showed diffuse demyelination. Sural nerve biopsy revealed characteristic signs of GAN. The patient's older sister had died at the age of 23, after having had similar neurological disturbances since childhood. This case illustrates an unfamiliar presentation of GAN, characterized by mild sensory neuropathy and serve CNS involvement, including seizures.
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PMID:Giant axonal neuropathy with predominant central nervous system manifestations. 131 Feb 92


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