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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (
seizures
)
80,221
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Incontinentia pigmenti (IP) has been associated with CNS involvement, including
seizures
, retardation, motor abnormalities, and malformations in greater than 30% of patients.
Motor symptoms
include spasticity and hyperreflexia; however, weakness and flaccidity have also been described. Peripheral nervous system neuropathology in patients with IP has not previously been reported. The infant with IP in this report showed generalized weakness due to anterior horn cell degeneration. The neuropathologic findings in both the central and peripheral nervous systems will be reviewed and contrasted to previous reports. Patients with IP and weakness should undergo neurodiagnostic evaluation of peripheral nervous system function.
...
PMID:Incontinentia pigmenti: association with anterior horn cell degeneration. 382 37
This study reports on 73 epileptic
seizures
(in 36 patients) originating in the temporal lobe (stereo-EEG) presenting motor or postural signs.
Motor symptoms
occur rarely in the early phase of
seizures
(less than 10% of our series) and they are exceptional during spontaneous
seizures
. The critical electrical discharge always affects extra-temporal structures such as the rolandic operculum, the cingulate gyrus, etc. The occurrence of motor symptoms during the late phase of
seizures
is associated with a long duration of the critical discharge and, again, with the involvement of extra-temporal structures. The characteristics of the associated clinical signs (e.g., frequent loss of contact with the environment, relatively rare oroalimentary automatic activities), together with the high frequency of secondary 'generalizations' are consistent with the stereo-EEG findings and indicate that these
seizures
also affect extra-temporal regions.
...
PMID:[Motor and postural manifestations of temporal lobe epilepsy seizure]. 713 75
The epileptic homozygotes of the Fayoumi strain of chickens (Fepi) are affected by photogenic reflex epilepsy with complete penetrance. Here we demonstrate that they are equally affected by audiogenic reflex epilepsy induced by intense sound stimulation. All the Fepi display sound-induced
seizures
from hatching to adulthood consisting of initial 'ictal arousal' and running fits usually followed by generalized clonico-tonic convulsions. A running fit is the preconvulsive
motor symptom
specifically induced by auditory stimulation while neck myoclonus is the preconvulsive
motor symptom
specifically induced by photic stimulation. The EEG interictal spikes and spike and waves are suppressed and replaced by a desynchronized trace during the
seizures
of both kinds. Viable neural chimeras were obtained by graft of embryonic brain vesicles from Fepi donors into normal chick embryos. Transfer of the complete audiogenic and photogenic phenotypes was obtained in chimeras resulting from embryonic substitution of both the prosencephalon and mesencephalon. The substitution of the prosencephalon alone resulted in transfer of interictal paroxysmal EEG activity accompanied by the sound and light-induced desynchronization and 'ictal arousal' with no motor
seizures
. Chimeras with embryonic substitution of the mesencephalon alone displayed running fits and convulsions induced by sound stimulation but only neck myoclonus following light stimulation. The conclusions are reached that: (i) the Fepi is a model of audiogenic and photogenic reflex epilepsy; (ii) in both types, the
seizure
initiator and the convulsion generator are localized in the brainstem, although reinforcement from telencephalic visual structures is needed to trigger photogenic generalized convulsions.
...
PMID:Brain chimeras for the study of an avian model of genetic epilepsy: structures involved in sound and light-induced seizures. 779 53
Head and eye turning is frequently observed during
seizures
. Versions with tonic and/or clonic symptoms can be differentiated from smooth head deviations. Head turning as a prominent symptom of status epilepticus has not previously been reported. We present eight case reports, (7 women/1 man, mean age 41 years, median 41.5, range 10 to 74), of status epilepticus (SE), with head turning as a prominent
motor symptom
. Six were accompanied by continuous frontal, occipital and temporal ictal epileptiform discharges. Furthermore, two patients had absence status with rhythmic and clonic head versions. While the localizing significance of head turnings in SE is low, in our cases, the direction was away from the discharging hemisphere in all cases of focal SE regardless of whether the turning was classified as version (three cases) or deviation (three cases). In this small series of SE, the classical observation of a patient looking away from the discharging hemisphere is still valid.
...
PMID:Head turning as a prominent motor symptom in status epilepticus. 1853 62
Electrical brain stimulation is used in a variety of clinical situations, including cortical mapping for epilepsy surgery, cortical stimulation therapy to terminate
seizure
activity in the cortex, and in deep brain stimulation therapy. However, the effects of stimulus parameters are not fully understood. In this study, we systematically tested the impact of various stimulation parameters on the generation of motor symptoms and afterdischarges (ADs). Focal electrical stimulation was delivered at subdural cortical, intracortical, and hippocampal sites in a rat model. The effects of stimulus parameter on the generation of motor symptoms and on the occurrence of ADs were examined. The effect of stimulus irregularity was tested using random or regular 50Hz stimulation through subdural electrodes. Hippocampal stimulation produced ADs at lower thresholds than neocortical stimulation. Hippocampal stimulation also produced significantly longer ADs. Both in hippocampal and cortical stimulation, when the total current was kept constant with changing pulse width, the threshold for
motor symptom
or AD was lowest between 50 and 100Hz and higher at both low and high frequencies. However, if the pulse width was fixed, the threshold did not increase above 100Hz and it apparently continued to decrease through 800Hz even if the difference did not reach statistical significance. There was no significant difference between random and regular stimulation. Overall, these results indicate that electrode location and several stimulus parameters including frequency, pulse width, and total electricity are important in electrical stimulation to produce motor symptoms and ADs.
...
PMID:Systematic study of the effects of stimulus parameters and stimulus location on afterdischarges elicited by electrical stimulation in the rat. 2314 65
The terms 'conversion', 'hysteria' and 'conversion hysteria' were used interchangeably to describe a condition characterised by a single somatised symptom, often pseudo-neurological in nature. DSM-III (American Psychiatric Association, 1980) expanded the concept of conversion to generalised symptoms involving loss or alteration of physical functioning suggestive of a physical disorder, along with a clinical indication that the conversion was an expression of psychological conflict or need. The type of symptom or deficit should be specified as: with
motor symptom
or deficit, with sensory symptom or deficit, with
seizure
or convulsions, or with mixed presentation (Kaplan & Sadock, 2004).
...
PMID:Fifteen-year follow-up of conversion disorder. 3150 90