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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (
seizures
)
80,221
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Of 62 patients given shunts for normal-pressure hydrocephalus of idiopathic type, 46.8% showed some improvement and 27.4% enjoyed virtually complete recovery. The best clinical predictor of good response was the complete triad of memory difficulty,
gait disorder
, and urine incontinence; 61.2% of patients with this combination of symptoms improved.
Gait disturbance
alone was also accompanied by improvement in two of three patients. An "obstructive" cisternographic radioisotope pattern was not significantly different from a "normal" pattern in predicting a response to shunting. Computerized tomography (CT) showing large ventricles and little atrophy predicted improvement in 11 out of 13 patients. There were five deaths within 3 months of shunting. The complication rate was 35.4%; subdural collections, shunt malfunction, and postoperative
seizures
constituted the most frequent complications. These data suggest that continued investigation for better predictions of shunt response is important, but that in the meantime the clinical pattern and cranial CT pattern are the most satisfactory guides to improvement after shunting.
...
PMID:Idiopathic normal-pressure hydrocephalus. Results of shunting in 62 patients. 735 91
Effects of flumazenil (Ro 15-1788, CAS 78755-81-4) on ethanol withdrawal syndrome (EWS) has been investigated in rats. Behavioral EWS symptoms appeared during the first 6 h of ethanol withdrawal. Flumazenil (2.5 and 10 mg/kg i.p.) increased horizontal and vertical locomotor activity significantly and also precipitated
abnormal gait
and agitation at the beginning of EWS in a dose dependent manner. However, thereafter it reduced the severity of abnormal posture and gait, tail stiffness, agitation and stereotyped behavior in a dose dependent manner. At the 6th hour of EWS, flumazenil (10 mg/kg) reduced total EWS score significantly, but shortened the latency of audiogenic
seizures
and increased the severity of wet dog shakes. Flumazenil (2.5 and 10 mg/kg) did not elicit behavioral EWS symptoms and audiogenic
seizures
in non-dependent (control) rats. It did not cause any significant change on locomotor activities in these groups. According to those results, certain actions of flumazenil on the experimental EWS may suggest a potential beneficial effect of this drug in the treatment of EWS in alcoholics, but its enhancing effects on some behavioral EWS symptoms and a potential proconvulsant activity may be a drawback for its use in the treatment of EWS.
...
PMID:Effects of flumazenil on ethanol withdrawal syndrome in rats. 771 Apr 30
The long-term efficacy and adverse-event profiles of sodium valproate and carbamazepine in children with newly diagnosed primary generalised or partial epilepsy were compared at 63 outpatient clinics. Children with two or more generalised tonic-clonic or partial
seizures
in the previous six months were randomised to oral sodium valproate (N = 130) or oral carbamazepine (N = 130) and followed for three years as outpatients. Dosages were increased as needed until
seizures
were controlled or toxicity developed. Sodium valproate and carbamazepine were equally effective in achieving high levels of
seizure
control in both primary generalised
seizures
and partial
seizures
with or without generalisation. Adverse events were mostly mild, few necessitating drug withdrawal. Those particularly associated with valproate were weight increase, alopecia and appetite increase, and with carbamazepine, rashes, somnolence, diplopia and
abnormal gait
/ataxia.
...
PMID:A multicentre comparative trial of sodium valproate and carbamazepine in paediatric epilepsy. The Paediatric EPITEG Collaborative Group. 785 77
The effects of bromocriptine and haloperidol, either alone or in combination, on ethanol withdrawal syndrome (EWS) have been investigated in rats. Bromocriptine (5 mg/kg 1P) inhibited wet dog shakes behavior and catatonia but potentiated the intensity of
abnormal gait
. The latency of the audiogenic
seizures
was prolonged by bromocriptine treatment. Haloperidol (0.5 mg/kg SC) decreased the intensity of stereotyped behavior but potentiated catatonia and agitation. It did not antagonize the behaviors induced by bromocriptine when injected in combination except the increased latency of the audiogenic
seizures
. The total intensity score of the EWS was not significantly different from that in untreated control. The results suggest that brain dopaminergic system may be involved to a limited extent in mediating the EWS in rats.
...
PMID:Effects of bromocriptine and haloperidol on ethanol withdrawal syndrome in rats. 788 15
Angelman syndrome (AS), characterized by mental retardation,
seizures
, frequent smiling and laughter, and
abnormal gait
, is one of the best examples of human disease in which genetic imprinting plays a role. In about 70% of cases, AS is caused by de novo maternal deletions at 15q11-q13 (ref. 2). Approximately 2% of AS cases are caused by paternal uniparental disomy (UPD) of chromosome 15 (ref. 3) and 2-3% are caused by "imprinting mutations'. In the remaining 25% of AS cases, no deletion, uniparental disomy (UPD), or methylation abnormality is detectable, and these cases, unlike deletions or UPD, can be familial. These cases are likely to result from mutations in a gene that is expressed either exclusively or preferentially from the maternal chromosome 15. We have found that a 15q inversion inherited by an AS child from her normal mother disrupts the 5' end of the UBE3A (E6-AP) gene, the product of which functions in protein ubiquitination. We have looked for novel UBE3A mutations in nondeletion/non-UPD/non-imprinting mutation (NDUI) AS patients and have found one patient who is heterozygous for a 5-bp de novo tandem duplication. We have also found in two brothers a heterozygous mutation, an A to G transition that creates a new 3' splice junction 7 bp upstream from the normal splice junction. Both mutations are predicted to cause a frameshift and premature termination of translation. Our results demonstrate that UBE3A mutations are one cause of AS and indicate a possible abnormality in ubiquitin-mediated protein degradation during brain development in this disease.
...
PMID:UBE3A/E6-AP mutations cause Angelman syndrome. 898 71
We reviewed 44 symptomatic children tested for CAG repeat expansions in the gene responsible for Huntington's disease (HD). Thirty-three patients had CAG repeat expansions, and 11 did not. No patient with a CAG repeat expansion had a negative family history of HD. Of the 15 patients presenting in the first decade, 12 had greater than 80 CAG repeats and a clinical profile at the time of the test that included two or more of the following: declining school performance,
seizures
, oral motor dysfunction, rigidity, and
gait disorder
. Three patients with smaller CAG repeat expansions had incomplete or atypical symptom profiles. Symptom patterns in patients presenting in the second decade were more varied but usually included behavioral and motor symptoms. Patients without CAG expansions had incomplete or atypical symptom profiles. We define the historical and clinical profiles of HD presenting in the first two decades and suggest that physicians exercise restraint in using a "diagnostic" gene test for HD in the evaluation of at-risk children with incomplete or atypical symptom profiles or no family history of HD, in whom test results are very likely to be normal or unrelated to the patient's symptoms.
...
PMID:Genetic testing of children at risk for Huntington's disease. US Huntington Disease Genetic Testing Group. 933 88
Although nutritional rickets remains a problem primarily in developing countries, children in northern climates in developed countries may also be at risk. We reviewed the case histories of five children diagnosed in Alaska during 1993-96. Three of the children were black and two Alaska Native. Their ages ranged from 11 to 20 months and they presented during January, April, and September. All of the children were breast-fed but only two received their milk intake exclusively from breast milk. The presenting complaint included
abnormal gait
in two children and
seizures
, bowed legs, and growth delay in one child each. All five children demonstrated a decrease in their height-for-age percentile. The most common physical finding was a rachitic rosary which was present in four children. In Alaska, all black and Alaska Native children (and other more pigmented children) less than two years of age who receive all or part of their milk intake from breast milk should receive vitamin D supplementation regardless of the time of year.
...
PMID:Nutritional rickets among breast-fed black and Alaska Native children. 947 10
An unusual presentation of biotinidase deficiency is described. The disorder classically presents in infancy or early childhood with intractable
seizures
, hypotonia, ataxia, hearing loss, dermatitis, and alopecia. A 5-year-old girl developed acute visual loss associated with optic atrophy, and disturbance of gait with predominantly lower-limb pyramidal signs. She had no
seizures
, and skin, hair, hearing, and intellect were normal. Biotinidase deficiency was confirmed biochemically and she responded well to biotin therapy. A diagnosis of biotinidase deficiency should be considered in children with unexplained bilateral optic neuropathy, particularly when there is accompanying
gait disorder
.
...
PMID:Late presentation of biotinidase deficiency with acute visual loss and gait disturbance. 943 60
Two cases are described in which a dissociative stupor originating from conversion neurosis simulated a coma following a sustained trauma. At first both patients showed no response to being addressed or to pain stimuli. They presented an upward eye gaze deviation, cardiorespiratory functions were stable. Following extensive diagnostic procedures revealing no organic cause for the clinical symptoms, the diagnosis of a hysterical consciousness disorder was stated. Symptoms of conversion neuroses include lacking call response,
gait disorder
,
seizure
-like conditions and strength diminution in one or more extremities. In these cases suspicious facts are the absence of injuries (for example by falling down or tongue bite during a dissociative attack), eye gaze deviation and the phenomenon that, when the patient's arm is raised above the head and let fall, it never hits the face but glides down beside the body.
...
PMID:[Dissociative stupor--differential diagnosis of coma following injury]. 986 37
A 4-year-old male Pekingese dog was referred to the clinic with a history of recurrent
seizures
and progressive
abnormal gait
and behavior, which did not respond to treatment. At necropsy, a large cortical defect in the right temporo-parietal cortex, malacia of subcortical white matter, right basal nuclei, and capsula interna, as well as abnormalities of the right hippocampus were observed. Histological examination of the brain revealed moderate to severe nonsuppurative meningoencephalitis in the left cerebral hemisphere and extensive infarction-like lesions with milder inflammation in the right hemisphere. In the right hippocampus, the pyramidal cells were arranged in a gyrus-like pattern and intermingled with gemistocytic and fibrillary astrocytes. The histopathological features of the inflammatory lesions were consistent with necrotizing meningoencephalitis and resembled those described in so-called Pug dog encephalitis. The hippocampal changes were interpreted as dysplasia (monolateral hippocampal cortical hamartia), unrelated to clinical signs and necrotizing inflammatory lesions.
...
PMID:Necrotizing meningoencephalitis associated with cortical hippocampal hamartia in a Pekingese dog. 1119 60
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