Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (seizures)
80,221 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A case of agenesis of the internal carotid artery combined with arachnoid cyst is reported. This 11-year-old boy had occasionally complained headache and nausea since he was of 9 years old. He was admitted to our hospital because of an epileptic seizure. Physical and neurological examinations on admission were normal. A CT scan showed a cystic mass in retrocerebellar region. MRI suggested absence of flow void area indicating internal carotid artery in the cavernous sinus on left side. Left common carotid angiogram showed absence of the internal carotid artery. Bilateral A2 segments were supplied by right A1 with tortuous anterior communicating artery. Left middle cerebral artery and left ophthalmic artery were supplied via dilated left posterior communicating artery on left vertebral angiogram. Thin slice, axial target image of the CT revealed absence of the left bony carotid canal. MRI by 3D TOF method confirmed no blood flow in this area. MR angiography provided sufficient information about cervical vessels non-invasively. 123I-IMP SPECT image ascertained no hypoperfusion area in left cerebral hemisphere. Convulsion was controlled with sodium valproate. Association of agenesis of the internal carotid artery and arachnoid cyst could be a coincidence.
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PMID:[Agenesis of the internal carotid artery--report of a case combined with arachnoid cyst in a child]. 163 34

Forty-six epileptic patients with partial seizures and normal CT underwent 48 examinations of early and delayed SPECT using I-123 IMP in the interictal phase. One of them underwent a follow-up SPECT in a more stable state compared to the first SPECT. Another patient, with informed consent, underwent a follow-up SPECT in combination with pharmacologic activation with bemegride. Early SPECT was performed 30 minutes after an IMP injection and delayed SPECT 4 to 4 1/2 hours later. Temporal changes in uptake pattern were visually classified into six types and compared with known patterns of SPECT uptake in relation to ischemic, hyperemic, and other changes. These were also correlated with the amount of epileptic activity seen on the EEG.
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PMID:Early and delayed I-123 IMP SPECT in epileptic patients with partial seizures and normal CT. 175 94

Iofetamine-single photon emission computed tomography (IMP-SPECT) was performed on 2 girls (5 1/2 and 6 years of age) with histories of intractable seizures, developmental delay, and unilateral hemiparesis secondary to hemimegalencephaly. Electroencephalography (EEG) revealed frequent focal discharges in 1 patient, while a nearly continuous burst suppression pattern over the malformed hemisphere was recorded in the other. IMP-SPECT demonstrated a good correlation with neuroimaging studies. In spite of the different EEG patterns, which had been proposed to predict contrasting clinical outcomes, both IMP-SPECT scans disclosed a similar decrease in tracer uptake in the malformed hemisphere. These results are consistent with the pattern of decreased tracer uptake found in other interictal studies of focal seizures without cerebral malformations. In view of recent recommendations for hemispherectomy in these patients, we suggest that the IMP-SPECT scan be used to compliment EEG as a method to define the extent of abnormality which may be more relevant to long-term prognosis than EEG alone.
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PMID:Hemimegalencephaly: clinical, EEG, neuroimaging, and IMP-SPECT correlation. 207 3

To evaluate the clinical usefulness of IMP SPECT in the diagnosis of epilepsy, 6 normals and 52 patients in the interictal phase were studied. Thirty min after an intravenous injection of 111 MBq IMP, SPECT was performed using a rotating gamma camera. Of 21 patients with simple partial seizures, a localized decrease of uptake was shown in 16, and an increase in 3. Topologically, these findings corresponded well to the ictal symptoms. Nine of 13 patients with localized epileptic EEG had a good correspondence between the findings on EEG and IMP SPECT. In 20 of 23 with complex partial seizures, the coronal images showed laterality of uptake in the temporal lobes, whereas the CT was normal in 14. However, these findings on IMP SPECT agreed with the EEG in the temporal leads in only 5 cases. Of 8 patients with primary generalized seizures, a diffuse cerebral decrease was shown in 3 of 4 patients with convulsive seizures (grand mal), and a normal uptake in 3 of 4 patients with non-convulsive seizures (petit mal). However, 2 patients showed a localized decrease, therefore, we determined that they suffered from partial seizures evolving to secondarily generalization. From these data, we concluded that IMP SPECT could be a useful method in the diagnosis of epilepsy.
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PMID:Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) using N-isopropyl-p-(123I) iodoamphetamine (IMP) in the evaluation of patients with epileptic seizures. 211 71

The reproducibility of two N-isopropyl-(iodine 123) p-iodoamphetamine (123I-IMP single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) scans both taken during interictal periods was studied in 13 adult patients with partial epilepsy who had normal CT scans. The frequency of the seizures and the nature of the ictal symptoms were virtually unchanged during the interval between the two SPECT scans performed in each case. In 8 (72.7%) of 11 patients who had abnormal images consisting of focal hypofixation images of 123I-IMP, i.e. zones of decreased regional cerebral blood flow on the first scans, complete or partial regional reproduction of the SPECT abnormalities was observed. This high reproducibility supports the usefulness of SPECT scans in the regional diagnosis of epileptic foci.
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PMID:High reproducibility of regional abnormalities on interictal 123I-IMP SPECT brain scans in adults with partial epilepsy. 214 4

I-123 Iofetamine (IMP) single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) imaging of the brain in 42 patients (ages 14 days to 23 years) was compared with other localizing studies in children with neurological diseases. All had an EEG and at least one imaging study of the brain (computed tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), or both). Seventy-eight percent of the patients had an EEG within 24-72 hours of the IMP-SPECT scan. Thirty-five (83%) had a history of seizures, and the remainder had other neurological conditions without a history of seizures. In most cases, a normal EEG reading with normal CT or MRI result predicted a normal SPECT study. When the EEG was abnormal the majority of the IMP-SPECT scans were abnormal and localized the abnormality to the same region. A comparison with CT and MRI showed that structural abnormalities involving the cortex were usually well demonstrated with IMP-SPECT imaging. Structural lesions confined to the white matter were generally not detectable with IMP-SPECT. In a few cases, SPECT scans revealed abnormalities in deep brain areas not identified by EEG. IMP-SPECT imaging is a valuable technique for the detection and localization of abnormal cerebral metabolic activity in children with seizure disorders. A correlation with CT or MRI is essential for proper interpretation of abnormalities detected with IMP SPECT imaging.
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PMID:I-123 Iofetamine SPECT scan in children with neurological disorders. 223 81

An 18-year-old woman with systemic lupus erythematosus developed neuropsychiatric disorders, including aseptic meningoencephalitis, organic brain syndrome and seizure. A series of computed axial tomography scans revealed the progression of marked atrophy of the right cerebral hemisphere for a period of 3 years without occlusion or stenosis of large vessels on cerebral angiography. I-123 IMP single photon emission computed tomography disclosed a markedly decreased uptake of I-123 IMP in the right cerebral hemisphere, and also in the left cerebellar hemisphere (crossed cerebellar diaschisis), which disappeared within 2 years.
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PMID:Cerebral hemiatrophy in systemic lupus erythematosus: report of a case. 227 27

Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) brain scans with N-isopropyl-(iodine 123) p-iodoamphetamine (123I-IMP) were performed three times in interictal periods in a 35-year-old man with intractable frontal lobe epilepsy and normal X-ray CT findings. The first scan showed decreased 123I-IMP uptake in the right frontal lobe. This abnormal image was regarded as the primary focus of his epilepsy on the basis of its regional agreement with focal epileptic discharges on EEGs. In the second scan, he showed normal imaging, while the third scan showed the same abnormal image as before, in the right frontal lobe. The frequency of his clinical seizures was almost unchanged during the intervals between scans and further EEGs recorded soon after each scan showed almost no changes in the basic activities and frequency of the epileptic discharges. Such fluctuations in SPECT brain imaging suggest that the severity of functional inactivation underlying the focal hypoperfusion image as an epileptic focus may fluctuate considerably in the interictal state with no relation to the clinical features of epilepsy.
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PMID:Fluctuations of interictal brain imaging in repeated 123I-IMP SPECT scans in an epileptic patient. 227 72

Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) of the brain using N-isopropyl-p-[123I] iodoamphetamine (123I-IMP) was performed in 11 children with port wine stain on the face or head, aged 1.0-14.2 years at investigation. Four cases without neurologic symptoms had no specific abnormality on SPECT and X-ray computed tomography (CT). In 4 cases of so-called Sturge-Weber syndrome with developmental quotients (DQ) or intelligence quotients (IQ) more than 80 and the neurologic symptoms consisting of seizures and hemiplegia, SPECT showed localized reduction of IMP accumulation, and CT exhibited calcification, atrophy and enhancement in 2 cases of 3 with contrast medium infusion in the same areas. In 3 cases with DQ of 50-60 and severer neurologic symptoms, SPECT showed diffuse reduction or defect of IMP accumulation in the ipsilateral hemisphere, and CT exhibited remarkable atrophy, calcifications and enhancement in 2 cases with contrast medium infusion in the same hemisphere. In one case with severe neurologic symptoms, SPECT performed at an early stage showed high IMP accumulation in the ipsilateral hemisphere.
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PMID:[Single photon emission computed tomography of the brain in Sturge-Weber syndrome using N-isopropyl-p-[123I] iodoamphetamine--a comparative study with X-ray computed tomography]. 240 Jun 12

Interictal I-123 iofetamine (IMP) single photon emission tomography (SPECT) was performed in 15 children with difficult-to-control partial or generalized seizures. SPECT studies were compared with magnetic resonance imaging and CT in seven patients, with magnetic resonance imaging only in five, and with CT only in three. Electroencephalography was performed on all subjects, including invasive studies in nine. SPECT was abnormal in six patients. Magnetic resonance and/or CT studies were abnormal in two of the six patients. The other four patients with abnormal SPECT imaging studies had four magnetic resonance and two CT studies that were normal. The SPECT abnormality corresponded to EEG localization in each of the six cases. Lesions localized on SPECT were in or near the temporal lobes. Five other patients with normal SPECT had well-localized abnormalities on EEG. Four magnetic resonance and five CT studies were also negative in these five cases. Four patients whose EEGs did not show adequate lateralization had four normal SPECT, two normal CT, and three normal magnetic resonance studies. In children as in adults, IMP SPECT imaging shows promise in the localization of seizure foci in or near the temporal lobes.
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PMID:I-123 iofetamine single photon emission tomography in school-age children with difficult-to-control seizures. 250 8


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