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

Syncope is a common clinical problem comprising the sudden loss of both consciousness and postural tone, with a subsequent spontaneous and relatively prompt recovery. Often it is difficult to differentiate a true syncopal spell from other conditions, such as seizure disorders, or from some simple accidents. Even more difficult is the identification of the cause of syncopal episodes. Nonetheless, establishing a definitive diagnosis ia an important task given the high risk of recurrent symptoms. Careful use of noninvasive and invasive cardiovascular studies (including electrophysiologic testing and tilt-table testing) along with selected hematologic, biochemical, and neurologic studies provides, in the majority of cases, the most effective strategy for obtaining a specific diagnosis and for directing therapy.
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PMID:Syncope: causes, clinical evaluation, and current therapy. 158 May 90

We examined 348 patients who underwent thrombolytic treatment for acute myocardial infarction. Nine patients (2.58%) developed neurological complications related directly or indirectly to this procedure. Cerebral hemorrhage occurred in 3 patients; 2 patients had transient ischemic attacks, 1 had syncope, another had psychomotor agitation and 2 patients presented seizures during the infusion of the thrombolytic agent, without hemodynamic abnormalities. This latter feature had never been described before.
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PMID:Neurological complications after thrombolytic treatment for acute myocardial infarction: emphasis on unprecedented manifestations. 162 95

Arsenic intoxication is a common form of heavy metal poisoning. Although arsenic-induced circulatory collapse, seizures, and syncope are well known, the potential for serious ventricular arrhythmias is less well recognized. Reported in this study are two cases of arsenic poisoning causing torsade de pointes. Furthermore, marked prolongation of the QT-U interval and the rarely observed phenomenon of T-U wave alternans are demonstrated. Thus, arsenic intoxication may be complicated by prolongation of the QT-U interval and torsade de pointes. T-U wave alternans occurs in the presence of a long QT-U interval and may be an electrocardiographic warning sign of torsade de pointes.
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PMID:Torsade de pointes and T-U wave alternans associated with arsenic poisoning. 168 32

We investigated the relative merits of the ocular compression test and the head-up tilt test to aid differentiation of syncope and seizures in young patients. Sixteen patients (10 males and 6 females) with a mean age of 14 +/- 4.7 (SD) years (range 7-22 years) underwent graded head-up tilt (15 degrees, 30 degrees, and 45 degrees for 2 minutes each, then 60 degrees for 20 minutes) following positive ocular compression testing defined as precipitation of asystole for at least 3 seconds (mean 5 seconds +/- 2 seconds, range 3-12 seconds). Each patient presented with recurrent unexplained loss of consciousness (mean number of episodes 30 +/- 45, mean duration of illness 52 +/- 40 months), and seven patients were receiving anticonvulsant medications, three of these had normal EEGs. Eleven patients (69%) developed vasovagal syncope during head-up tilt, reproducing their clinical episodes (systolic blood pressure decreased from 105 +/- 10 mmHg to 84 +/- 13 mmHg, diastolic blood pressure from 75 +/- 9 to 22 +/- 25 mmHg, and heart rate from 89 +/- 13 beats/min to 37 +/- 20 beats/min). Asystole occurred in two patients during vasovagal syncope lasting 11 seconds in one and 16 seconds in the other, and, it was associated with myoclonic movements in both (convulsive syncope). Based on these findings, and given the perceived potential hazards of the ocular compression test, the head-up tilt test may be a safer procedure that adds useful information to the diagnostic evaluation of these patients.
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PMID:Vasovagal syncope: diagnostic role of head-up tilt test in patients with positive ocular compression test. 170 96

In a 31 years old woman with primary alveolar hypoventilation (Ondine's curse) and noctural seizures the arterial blood gases, EEG and blood flow velocity in the middle cerebral artery were measured before, during and after a phase of apnea terminated by a convulsive syncope. The blood flow velocity abruptly increased to the 2.5 fold of the initial value with the beginning of the convulsions, which is interpreted as a break down of the cerebral autoregulation.
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PMID:[Ondine's curse with convulsive syncope. Clinical and Doppler ultrasound observations]. 179 55

In a prospective study of consecutive patients (age 15 or over) with transient loss of consciousness 45 patients had a history of seizure and 74 patients had a history of syncope. All patients had an EEG, ECG, laboratory tests and a hyperventilation test and were followed for an average of 14.5 months. Epileptiform activity in the interictal EEG had a sensitivity of 0.40 and a specificity of 0.95 for the diagnosis of a seizure. Epileptiform activity nearly doubled the probability of a seizure in doubtful cases. If no epileptiform activity was found, this probability remained substantially the same. The hyperventilation test had a sensitivity of 0.57 and a specificity of 0.84 for the diagnosis of syncope. A positive test increased the probability of syncope half as much in doubtful cases. A negative test did not exclude syncope. Laboratory tests were not helpful except for an ECG which was helpful in elderly patients.
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PMID:Syncope or seizure? The diagnostic value of the EEG and hyperventilation test in transient loss of consciousness. 180 Jun 65

Even in the absence of clinically apparent seizures, patients undergoing chronic dialysis often exhibit abnormal EEG activity, which is usually attributed to the type of dialysis or to the dysequilibrium syndrome. To find out whether these abnormalities occurred only during dialysis sessions, 10 children with end-stage renal failure undergoing chronic dialysis were continuously monitored for 52 h during dialysis and between two sessions. The EEG tracing was abnormal in 5 children. Two had paroxysmal aspecific slow waves towards the end of the sessions, with a fall in blood pressure, malaise and fainting. In 3 children EEG abnormalities - also present in the interdialytic period - were not clinically apparent. Long-term EEG monitoring in these cases distinguished between the electrical events that were related to dialysis and those that were not. It also suggested that, rather than being dialysis-dependent, these events frequently reflect a basic neurological disorder.
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PMID:Long-term EEG monitoring in uremic children on chronic dialysis treatment. 186 59

The hormonal response of the anterior pituitary to various epileptic and nonepileptic events in children was studied. Postictal serum prolactin and cortisol levels were measured in 17 children with epilepsy, 23 with febrile seizures, and 10 with syncope or breath-holding spells. The levels were compared with those of 30 children with nonspecific fever, and 23 afebrile children served as control subjects. Significantly higher (P less than .01) prolactin levels (26.5 +/- 3.3 ng/mL, mean +/- SEM) were found in the epileptic group, compared with levels in children with febrile seizures (13.2 +/- 1.0 ng/mL), fever (11.2 +/- 0.9 ng/mL), syncope (7.3 +/- 0.9 ng/mL), and the control group (7.9 +/- 0.6 ng/mL). In contrast, serum cortisol levels were nonspecifically elevated in the epileptics and patients with febrile seizures or fever only. These findings suggest that elevated prolactin levels may be found after epileptic seizures and much less after febrile seizures, but not after breath-holding spells or syncopal events. Cortisol secretion appears to be nonselectively triggered by all stressful events, such as epileptic and febrile seizures, and fever. Elevated prolactin levels (greater than 15 ng/mL) associated with seizures may help in differentiating epileptic from febrile seizures or syncope.
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PMID:Prolactin and cortisol levels in various paroxysmal disorders in childhood. 188 27

Intravenous fluorescein angiography is a commonly performed and extraordinarily valuable diagnostic procedure. The frequency of adverse reactions after angiography has varied considerably in previous reports. In a prospective study of 2789 angiographic procedures in 2025 patients, the authors found that the percentage of adverse reactions depended strongly on the patient's angiographic history. Overall, adverse reactions followed 4.8% of the angiographic procedures. These reactions included nausea (2.9%), vomiting (1.2%), flushing/itching/hives (0.5%), and other reactions (dyspnea, syncope, excessive sneezing) (0.2%). No cases of anaphylaxis, myocardial infarction, pulmonary edema, or seizures occurred. The percentage of reactions was 1.8% for patients who had had previous angiography without ever having had an adverse reaction. In contrast, the percentage of reactions was 48.6% for patients who had had an adverse reaction to angiography previously.
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PMID:Frequency of adverse systemic reactions after fluorescein angiography. Results of a prospective study. 189 Dec 25

Evaluation of patients with syncope often includes a battery of noninvasive tests. In this study, 45 patients (26 with suspected neurologic and 19 with suspected cardiac syncope) were evaluated with simultaneous 24-hour electroencephalographic (EEG) and 2-channel electrocardiographic (ECG) recordings. Isolated cardiac rhythm abnormalities were noted in 21 patients, but none of these was symptomatic and no definitive arrhythmias occurred. Isolated EEG abnormalities were noted in 11 patients, 5 of whom had EEG abnormalities consistent with seizure disorders. Simultaneous EEG and ECG abnormalities were seen in 4 patients. In 2 cases, a previously unsuspected etiology for syncope was found: seizures in 1 patient with heart disease, and sinus pauses in another thought to have a seizure disorder. Thus, combined ambulatory EEG/ECG monitoring may prove useful in the evaluation of some patients with syncope.
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PMID:Combined ambulatory electroencephalographic and electrocardiographic recordings for evaluation of syncope. 192 21


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