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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (
seizures
)
80,221
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Neuronal ceroid-lipofuscinosis is the most common class of neurodegenerative disease in children. After decades of study, the biochemical basis for this group of diseases continues to elude scientists. One obstacle has been the difficulty in establishing specific criteria for diagnosis. This paper reviews case material from 65 patients referred to the Shriver Center for study from January, 1984 to December, 1986. The late-infantile type was the most commonly encountered (35%) with a mean age-of-onset of 3.1 +/- 0.5 yr. The juvenile type was slightly less frequent (32%) with a mean age-of-onset of 7.8 +/- 4 yr. The infantile type ranked third (23%); age-of-onset 11 +/- 4 months) and the adult form of the disease was the least common (10%; age-of-onset 25 +/- 4 yr). Consistent clinical findings were a progressive decline in mental faculties and
seizures
, predominantly of the myoclonic type. Neuroradiological changes of cerebral and cerebellar cortical atrophy were common when studies were obtained more than a year after clinical onset. Ataxia was a frequent manifestation in the late-infantile and juvenile types whereas
dystonia
was unique to the latter. There was a diversity of ultrastructural findings in skin biopsies between and within types. The absence of findings in a few familial cases necessitated sampling a second tissue such as muscle, particularly when the history was suggestive and urine dolichols were high. Elevated urine dolichol levels was a nonspecific but helpful finding.
...
PMID:Clinical classification of neuronal ceroid-lipofuscinosis subtypes. 314 29
Four cases of hypnogenic paroxysmal
dystonia
are described. The patients (three males and one female), aged between 12 and 39 were subjected to neurological, physical and psychological examination, and routine lab tests and brain CT scan were carried out within normal limits. One of the patients suffered from diurnal epileptic
seizures
. Repeated EEG recordings during wakefulness were normal. During polysomnographic and TV recordings the patients showed different types of dystonic fits occurring several times a night, always brief, and starting during NREM sleep. Carbamazepine therapy proved to be relatively effective in three subjects.
...
PMID:Hypnogenic paroxysmal dystonia: a new type of parasomnia? 339 5
A prospective long-term semiquantitative evaluation of the results of ventral intermediate-posterior ventral oral nucleus thalamotomy on the different aspects of
dystonia
was made in 29 patients with secondary disease, 12 with nonfamilial, eight with (non-Jewish) familial, and seven with atypical DMD. The effect of disease progression, even in secondary patients, on surgical outcome was reviewed. Thalamotomy resulted in a long-term improvement in limb function of more than 25% to 50% in 23% of the patients, over 50% in 34% of patients, but midline features responded poorly. Manual dexterity was little changed in secondary cases because of underlying paralysis but improved 38% in cases of DMD. Involvement of neck and trunk, of three to four limbs, and progressive disease prognosticated for a poorer result, but phasic and tonic, familial, and nonfamilial
dystonia
respond equally well and age at surgery made no difference. Significant complications in 29 secondary cases included one death 31 days postoperative, one case of worsened hemiparesis, two cases of worsened dysarthria, two cases of worsened locomotion, one case of hydrocephalus requiring shunting, and one case of need for permanent tracheotomy. In 27 cases of typical and atypical DMD, there were two instances of hemiparesis, two of significant speech deterioration, three of hand ataxia, one of postoperative
seizures
, and one of hydrocephalus requiring shunting for an overall significant morbidity rate of 21%. The limiting factor in treating secondary
dystonia
is the underlying spastic paralysis but that in DMD is the relentless postoperative progression. The overall results of this study are remarkably similar to those of other published series: a quarter of the patients improved by 25% to 50%, a quarter to a third by more than 50%. The analysis of effect on specific features of the disease may be useful in the future for predicting outcome in a particular patient.
...
PMID:Thalamotomy in generalized dystonia. 340 May 14
Acquired movement disorders in children can present a diagnostic dilemma. Chorea,
dystonia
, and atypical
seizures
must be distinguished from simple or complex tics. The combination of chronic motor and vocal tics, Tourette syndrome, may in some children be associated with thought and behavioral disorders, sleep disturbances, headaches, and school difficulties (e.g., attention deficit disorder). The increasing numbers of children recognized as having Tourette syndrome, its broadening clinical spectrum and frequent familial nature are detailed in this review.
...
PMID:Diagnosis of Tourette syndrome in childhood. The need for heightened awareness. 346 98
The therapeutic responses of seven children with Wilson's disease who presented with neurological disease were evaluated. Neurological abnormalities comprised intellectual deterioration in 7, conduct disorder in five,
dystonia
in three, choreoathetosis in three,
seizures
in one and hemiparesis in one. Lethargy and weight loss were present for several months in 6 children. Four children had clinically demonstrable liver disease which was fatal in two. Electroencephalography performed in two children was normal. Computed tomography (CT) of the brain in three children showed cerebral atrophy in all and areas of low attenuation in the basal ganglia which resolved on treatment in one. All patients were treated with penicillamine but, in four, triethylene tetramine (TETA) was substituted because of adverse effects. Neurological abnormalities in these patients were reversible.
...
PMID:Neurological abnormalities in Wilson's disease are reversible. 356 99
We report 15 cases of Rett syndrome, a slowly progressive disorder that occurs only in girls and is characterized by early deterioration of higher brain function with dementia and autistic behavior, loss of purposeful use of the hands, and deceleration of head growth. Epilepsy, with minor motor
seizures
being the predominant type, has its onset between 2 and 4 years of age in the majority of cases. Additional features include an extrapyramidal disorder with
dystonia
and choreoathetosis, and lactic acidemia. A precise biochemical marker of this disorder has not been identified.
...
PMID:Rett syndrome. A commonly overlooked progressive encephalopathy in girls. 372 2
Lacunar infarcts in the basal ganglia are known to cause various movement disorders, such as chorea, focal
dystonia
, and hemichorea-hemiballismus. We report here a case of putaminal lacunar infarction which presented with "painful tonic spasms" of the contralateral limbs. This consisted of paroxysmal brief, painful, flexor contractures of the upper, and occasionally the lower limb. These were not focal
seizures
but were controlled with carbamazepine, which has been used for the "painful tonic spasms" well-associated with multiple sclerosis. The putaminal infarct we describe is probably related to a lupus anticoagulant and systemic lupus erythematosus.
...
PMID:Painful tonic spasms caused by putaminal infarction. 381 Jul 37
Neurological side effects associated with neuroleptic drugs result from a complex interaction of multiple neurotransmitters. To clarify the etiology of neuroleptic-induced acute dystonic reactions, monkeys (Cercopithecus aethiops) were treated with haloperidol at doses sufficient to evoke
dystonia
, and the effects of agents that influenced dopaminergic, cholinergic, or GABAergic neurotransmitters were evaluated. Apomorphine, a dopamine (DA) agonist, and biperiden, an acetylcholine (ACh) antagonist, decreased acute
dystonia
, whereas alpha-methyl-p-tyrosine (AMPT), an inhibitor of DA synthesis, and physostigmine, an ACh agonist, agonist, increased the symptoms. Muscimol, a GABA agonist, increased the dystonias in a dose-dependent way, and GABA inhibition with picrotoxin also aggravated
dystonia
, complicated by systemic intoxication and
seizures
. The reciprocal interaction between DA and ACh influences is consistent with clinical findings and animal models of dyskinesias.
Dystonia
may also be modulated by GABAergic substrates, but the results suggest complex interactions among DA, ACh, and GABA neurotransmission. Symptoms involving the orofacial, limb, and trunk regions, and purposeless overactivity are discussed in comparison with acute and tardive neuroleptic-induced movement disorders.
...
PMID:Dopamine, acetylcholine, and GABA effects in acute dystonia in primates. 677 41
Clinical and pathological studies are reported from investigation of a 27-year-old man with GM1 gangliosidosis who experienced a slowly progressive
dystonia
that began about age 4, primarily affected the face and limbs, and eventually became almost totally incapacitating. There was only mild intellectual deterioration; myoclonus,
seizures
, and macular cherry-red spots were never observed. Postmortem examination revealed intraneuronal storage, localized predominantly to the basal ganglia, in which neurons contained round, multilamellated inclusions. Golgi studies revealed meganeurites arising from medium spiny neurons. Other areas of the central nervous system appeared relatively unaffected, although small basilar dilatations were observed in scattered cortical pyramidal neurons and Purkinje cell dendrites showed focal swellings. Vacuolated cells of the reticuloendothelial system were observed, including Kupffer cells and histiocytes in the spleen, marrow, and intestinal tract. Biochemical analysis revealed a generalized beta-galactosidase deficiency with specific accumulation of GM1 ganglioside in the basal ganglia.
...
PMID:Chronic GM1 gangliosidosis presenting as dystonia: I. Clinical and pathological features. 679 74
Two cases of calcification of Striopallidodentate System will be considered. The first refers to a 20-years-old patient and features two small bilateral and symmetrical calcifications in the medial segment of globus pallidum. The first symptom, observed from the age 5 years was, behaviour disorder and, some years later,
dystonia
. The second case refers to a 54-years-old patient and features huge bilateral and symmetrical calcifications above and below the tentorium. The first symptoms started at the age of 32 with paraesthesiae and muscular contractions of the upper limbs, later with convulsive
seizures
and tetany and eventually right hemiplegia with aphasia. Study of Ca and P metabolism showed normoparathyroidism in the first case and idiopathic hypoparathyroidism in the second.
...
PMID:[Striopallidodentate calcifications. Report of two cases (author's transl)]. 734 49
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