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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (
seizures
)
80,221
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Single photon emission tomography (SPET) imaging holds promise for localization of the site of extratemporal
seizures
, but limited data currently exist; in particular, correlations with stereo-electroencephalography (S-EEG) have not been made. Ten patients aged 14-44 years (mean 25 years) with a proven frontal or central epilepsy by S-EEG and post-surgical follow-up were studied retrospectively: 7 patients had frontal cortectomy and one patient had a callosotomy for bifrontal epilepsy. All patients underwent clinical, inter-ictal and ictal video-EEG, computed tomography scan and/or magnetic resonance imaging, SPET and S-EEG examinations. SPET was performed inter-ictally, while on usual epileptic medications, using 99Tcm-HMPAO (n = 4) or 123I-
IMP
(n = 6) as the perfusion tracer. The SPET images were evaluated independently by two observers, blind to any data other than the diagnosis of frontral or central epilepsy. Localization of inter-ictal SPET hypoperfusion was compared with the epileptogenic (EZ), irritative (IZ) and lesional (LZ) zones, as defined by S-EEG. Six patients showed structural frontal abnormalities. One patient had normal SPET and one had a contralateral hypoperfusion. Therefore, concordance of sides was found in 8 of 10 patients (including one with bilateral SPET and S-EEG abnormalities). The hypoperfusion was equal to or larger than the EZ + IZ + LZ in 6 patients (5 had a frontal lesion). SPET hypoperfusion was smaller than the EZ in one patient, and different from the EZ, IZ and LZ in two patients. Although this was a retrospective study, it provides qualitative data regarding the significance of inter-ictal SPET abnormalities in frontal or central epilepsy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Inter-ictal brain SPET in frontal epilepsy: correlations with stereo-electroencephalography. 747 98
A 9-year-old right-handed girl was admitted because of complex partial seizures, left-right disorientation and finger agnosia. At the age of 2 years, she began to have
seizures
, which were exacerbated by carbamazepine and diazepam. Subsequently she was treated with phenytoin and phenobarbital, and remained
seizure
-free for four years. After age 7, she began to have attacks of alteration of consciousness, which lasted 10 seconds and occurred every two or three months. At age 9, neuropsychological testing revealed borderline intellectual functioning (WISC-R:FSIQ 83, VIQ 94, PIQ 73), but selective deficits were found in tests of calculation and spatial-figural relationships. Axial spin echo (3,000/22) image showed an abnormal high signal intensity in the left temporo-parieto-occipital lobe, in which interictal
IMP
-SPECT demonstrated decreased cerebral blood flow. These results seemed to explain the relationship between clinical findings and focal migration disorder. It is important to detect a focal migration disorder in patients with intractable focal epilepsy or higher cortical dysfunctions.
...
PMID:[Higher cortical dysfunctions and image diagnosis in a 9-year-old girl with complex partial epilepsy caused by focal neural migration disorder]. 761 91
Semiology of postictal aphasia as well as its generating mechanism involving both the epileptogenic zone and language area has not yet been sufficiently elucidated. Therefore, postictal aphasias were studied in 3 patients with localization-related epilepsy. Postictal motor aphasia was observed in a patient (patient 1) with frontal lobe epilepsy whose recovery of language function progressed from loss of language function, to Broca's aphasia, and eventually to poor spontaneous speech. Postictal sensory aphasia was observed in 2 patients (patient 2 and 3) with temporal lobe epilepsy whose recovery of language function progressed from loss of language function, to jargon, and eventually to circumlocutory anomic speech. Both patient 2 and 3 did not show fluent speech.
Seizure
manifestations, EEG,
IMP
-SPECT and MRI indicated that epileptogenic zones were in the left frontal lobe including Broca's area in patient 1, the mesial part of the left temporal lobe in patient 2, and the middle and posterior part of the left temporal lobe including Wernicke's area in patient 3. A postictal verbal dichotic listening test showed the reduction of correct responses by right ear in the patient 3. Postictal auditory verbal learning tests showed the impairment of verbal memorization in patient 2 and 3. The impairment of verbal memorization was particularly marked in patient 2. These results suggest that 1) the characteristics of postictal motor and sensory aphasia are clearly elucidated by analyzing the sequence of recovery from postictal language dysfunction, 2) postictal aphasia is generated by the epileptogenic zone involving the language area or the ictal discharges propagating to the language area, and 3) not only the disturbance of language function, but also the impairment of verbal memorization seems to participate in the disturbance of repeating and understanding sentences in the patient with postictal sensory aphasia.
...
PMID:[Postictal aphasia and its generating mechanism in 3 patients with localization-related epilepsy]. 768 19
We present here magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and single photon emission computed tomography with 123I-N-isopropyl-p-iodoamphetamine (123I-
IMP
-SPECT) of a patient suffering from Klinefelter's syndrome with various neuropsychiatric symptoms. He was a 30-year-old male, who showed impaired consciousness
seizures
, auditory hallucination, delusion of reference, delusion of grandeur, psychomotor excitement and intellectual impairment. Although no focal lesion was detected by computed tomography or T1-weighted MRI, T2-weighted MRI provided a heterogeneous high-signal-intensity lesion of the inferior part of the left temporal lobe, which was not enhanced with Gd-DTPA. In addition 123I-
IMP
-SPECT exhibited focal hypoperfusion in the left temporal lobe on the early images. We suggest that the neuropsychiatric symptoms of this case are associated with the focal organic brain dysfunction which was revealed by MRI and 123I-
IMP
-SPECT.
...
PMID:MRI and SPECT of Klinefelter's syndrome with various neuropsychiatric symptoms: a case report. 791 Nov 67
N-isopropyl-p-[123I]iodoamphetamine (123I-IMP) single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), electroencephalography (EEG), and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) were performed in 19 patients with temporal lobe epilepsy during interictal stage. MRI demonstrated abnormal signal in mesial temporal lobe (hippocampus) in 10 of 19 patients and 123I-
IMP
SPECT showed a hypoperfusion area in 15 of 19 patients. When compared with EEG and MRI data, disagreement of the affected area was observed in 3 cases. In comparison of EEG and 123I-
IMP
SPECT data, disagreement of the affected area was observed in 6 cases. Although there were no disagreement in comparison of MRI and 123I-
IMP
SPECT. We made a reprojection data parallel to the hippocampus in 123I-
IMP
SPECT. These data demonstrated obviously a hypoperfusion area around the hippocampus. In cases within one month from
seizure
attack, wide hypoperfusion area was showed on 123I-
IMP
SPECT in comparison of abnormal signal area on MRI. It could be considered that a reprojection data parallel to the hippocampus was useful to know extent of hypoperfusion area in temporal lobe epilepsy.
...
PMID:[A comparison among 123I-IMP SPECT, EEG and MRI in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy]. 796 91
Brain SPECT of regional cerebral blood flow using I-123
IMP
demonstrated a focally decreased perfusion area immediately adjacent to a venous angioma in a patient with simple partial
seizures
. A positive correlation was obtained among the location of the venous angioma, the decreased perfusion area on SPECT images, and the electroencephalographic focus. Anomalous venous drainage through a venous angioma may explain a perfusion disturbance in the surrounding brain of the angioma. High-resolution SPECT imaging with magnetic resonance guidance provides useful information on the pathophysiology of venous angiomas.
...
PMID:Brain perfusion SPECT in a patient with a subtle venous angioma. 798 12
We report a case of visual presevertation in a 67-year-old man. He had been well until 66 years of age when he had brain hemorrhage in the right occipital lobe. After an operation for removal of the hematoma, visual hallucination occurred and persisted for about 6 months. One year and a half later, he had a convulsive
seizure
and diphenylhydantoin was started. During the two weeks following the convulsion, he several times experienced episodes of visual preservation, visual hallucination and metamorphopsia. MRI revealed an old hemorrhage in the right occipital lobe. 123I-
IMP
SPECT demonstrated increase of cerebral blood flow of the right medial occipital lobe one day after the episode of visual perseveration and decrease about three weeks after the episode. The mechanism which causes visual perseveration still remains to be clarified. The findings of 123I-
IMP
SPECT of the present case suggest that visual perseveration may be generated by postictal transient functional excitation of the right occipital lobe.
...
PMID:[123I-IMP SPECT findings of visual perseveration in a patient with old hemorrhage in the right occipital lobe]. 799 91
Local cerebral blood flow and glucose metabolism were examined in spontaneously epileptic El mice using autoradiography with 125I-
IMP
and 14C-DG in the interictal phase and during
seizure
. El (+) mice that developed generalized tonic-clonic convulsions and El (-) mice that received no stimulation and had no history of epileptic
seizures
were examined. The
seizure
non-susceptible, maternal strain ddY mice were used as control. Uptake ratios for
IMP
and DG in mouse brain were calculated using the autoradiographic density. In the interictal phase, the pattern of local cerebral blood flow of El (+) mice was similar to that of ddY and El (-) mice, and glucose metabolism in the hippocampus was higher in El (+) mice than in El (-) and ddY mice, but flow and metabolism were nearly matched. During
seizure
, no significant changed blood flow and increased glucose metabolism in the hippocampus, the epileptic focus, and no markedly changed blood flow and depressed glucose metabolism in other brain regions were observed and considered to be flow-metabolism uncoupling. These observations have never been reported in clinical or experimental studies of epilepsy.
Seizures
did not cause large regional differences in cerebral blood flow. Therefore, only glucose metabolism is useful for detection of the focus of secondary generalized
seizures
in El mice, and appeared possibly to be related to the pathophysiology of secondary generalized epilepsy in El mice.
...
PMID:[Local cerebral blood flow and glucose metabolism during seizure in spontaneously epileptic El Mice]. 852 46
A 4 month old female infant with atypical asymmetrical massive gray matter heterotopia diagnosed as West syndrome is described. Her
seizure
initially appeared as afebrile general tonic and clonic convulsion and progressed to typical West syndrome consisting of clusters of myoclonic spasms of the extremities, mainly on the left side, accompanied by head and eye deviation to the right side. Electroencephalogram (EEG) presented typical hypsarrhythmia and cranial computerized tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed massive heterotopic gray matter in the right hemisphere with the same density or intensity as cortical gray matter. Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), using N-isopropyl-p-123I-iodoamphetamine (123 I-
IMP
), demonstrated decreased blood flow in the ectopic lesion. Although clinical response to several anti-epileptic drugs was poor, her
seizures
were well controlled by relatively low dose adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) therapy of 0.015 mg/kg per day followed by a combination of valproic acid and clonazepam.
...
PMID:A case of West syndrome with atypical massive gray matter heterotopia that is well controlled by ACTH therapy. 874 22
To evaluate the redistribution phenomenon on delayed I-123
IMP
SPECT images of children and adolescents with partial
seizures
, 25 patients were selected and investigated in the interictal state. Early and delayed SPECT were performed 15-20 minutes and 5 hours, respectively, after I-123
IMP
injection. Redistribution patterns were classified into three groups: 1) redistribution (RD) (-) group (n = 5), in which a low-uptake area on the early image persisted or was enlarged on the delayed image, 2) RD (+) group (n = 14), in which a low-uptake area on the early image changed to normal distribution on the delayed image, and 3) marked redistribution (MRD) (+) group (n = 6), In which a low-uptake area on the early image changed to a high uptake area on the delayed image. Among the patients who were followed for at least 12 months after the SPECT scans, the short-term clinical outcome tended to be good in the RD (+) group, intermediate in the MRD (+) group, and poor in the RD (-) group. These results of our preliminary comparative study indicate that the redistribution pattern of I-123
IMP
may be related to the clinical aspects in patients with partial
seizures
and that it may play an important role in predicting their short-term clinical outcome.
...
PMID:Redistribution on I-123 IMP SPECT in children and adolescents with partial seizures. 884 69
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