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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (
seizures
)
80,221
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
After an upper respiratory tract infection an eight months old infant developed a severe hemolytic uremic syndrome with anemia, thrombocytopenia and anuria. Remarkable was a lesion of the erythrocytes by neuraminidase producing microorganisms. By early hemodialysis, blood transfusions and accurate fluid therapy the acute stage could be managed. The proceeding course was complicated by hypertension,
seizures
, coma, abdominal pain attacks and a fibrinous hemorrhagic pericarditis, which made an incomplete pericardectomy necessary. Although it came again to diuresis a severe chronic renal failure with its concluding effects as anemia, acidosis, hypertension and
inanition
resulted. After a four months period the patient died of biventricular congestive heart failure.
...
PMID:[Severe course of a hemolytic-uremic syndrome]. 715 51
The electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), which provokes a generalized epileptic seizure by an electrical stimulus, was first administered in 1938 and performed without anesthesia during thirty years. Nowadays, ECT is carried out using brief anesthesia (preferably methohexital) and skeletal muscle relaxation (succinylcholine) to avoid fearful complications like bone and muscle fractures. ECT is a safe treatment without absolute contraindications; the treatment risk corresponds to the risk of general anesthesia. ECT is indicated in depression, mania and schizophrenia. It plays an important role in the treatment of therapy resistant, severely ill patients with affective disorders, suicidal drive, delusional symptoms, vegetative dysregulation,
inanition
and catatonic symptoms. The response rate (remission or marked improvement) is about 70%. Usually ECT is performed 3 times per week, resulting in an ECT course with a total number of 6 to 12 single treatments. Within 2 or 3 weeks a substantial improvement can be expected. Further controlled studies are required with regard to antidepressive and/or antipsychotic continuation therapy after successful ECT course. Brief pulse stimulation, unilateral nondominant electrode placement and individual stimulus titration with respect to
seizure
threshold (EEG monitoring is required!) can minimize cognitive side effects. The apprehension that ECT could cause prolonged amnesia and structural brain damage has not been confirmed by the available scientific data. Modern brain imaging methods could elicit the until now unknown mode of action of ECT.
...
PMID:[Clinical value of electroconvulsive therapy in treatment of depression]. 1063 58