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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (
seizures
)
80,221
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity plays an important role in controlling cerebrospinal fluid production and also influences neuroexcitation and susceptibility to
seizures
. Until recently, CA II was the only CA demonstrated in brain. Its distribution is limited to the epithelial cells of the choroid plexus and to the myelin-forming cells, the oligodendrocytes. In this report, we present immunoblots, using an antibody raised to CA IV from rat lung, that show that CA IV is also present in rat and mouse brain. Results of immunohistochemistry and immunoelectron microscopy on sections from rat and mouse brain are presented that show the distribution of CA IV to be quite distinct from that of CA II. CA IV is expressed on and is limited to the luminal surface of endothelial cells of cerebral capillaries. These results establish CA IV as a cytochemical marker associated with the blood-brain barrier and suggest an important role for CA IV in
CO2
and HCO3- homeostasis in brain.
...
PMID:Carbonic anhydrase IV on brain capillary endothelial cells: a marker associated with the blood-brain barrier. 149 71
Ondine's syndrome is a rare condition characterised by alveolar hypoventilation during sleep on account of an abnormality in the automatic control of respiration. The respiration centre does not react adequately to the
carbon dioxide
tension in the blood required to maintain normal ventilation. We present a description of the course in an infant with congenital Ondine's syndrome because a therapeutic possibility is now available, viz, implantation of a phrenic nerve pacemaker. The infants showed respiratory insufficiency shortly after delivery. This disappeared on tactile stimulation. The infant had generalised hypotonia with absent patellar reflexes and weak sucking reflexes and, at the age of one week,
seizures
developed. The infant was treated with assisted ventilation but this could be reduced to use only during the period when the infant slept. The infant was in good health with normal psychomotor development until the age of two years. Plans had been made to implant a phrenic nerve pacemaker. Unfortunately, the infant developed Syncytial-virus pneumonia complicated by bacterial superinfection and developed severe anoxic brain damage which subsequently proved fatal.
...
PMID:[Ondine's syndrome (alveolar hypoventilation)]. 150 98
The designation of "Infantile Bilateral Striatal Necrosis" (IBSN) was first given by Friede in 1975. However, this unusual condition was first described by Paterson and Carmichael in 1924. The disease is rare with uncertain etiology. The clinical picture includes choreoathetosis, abnormal eye movements,
seizures
and mental dullness. These circumstances often follow symptoms such as fever, vomiting and impaired consciousness. The final diagnosis is confirmed by pathological examination, which reveals symmetrical degeneration of bilateral basal ganglia. With present technology IBSN can be well demonstrated in the brain Ct scans or MRI scans nowadays. This article reports four cases with clinical manifestations which had appeared before the age of one year. Three cases had prodromal upper respiratory tract infection symptoms with vomiting, while
seizure
and impaired consciousness ensued. One case had several bouts of pneumonitis followed by
seizures
, impaired consciousness and abnormal eye movement. Brain sonogram of one of these cases showed hyper-echoic basal ganglia, while CT scans or MRI scans revealed symmetrical hypodensity or signal change over bilateral basal ganglia, respectively. All of these led to a bedridden life. These four cases are reported based on their clinical presentations and brain imaging findings, in spite of the absence of pathological confirmation. Some of the literature are also reviewed. To sum up, IBSN should be kept in mind in the differential diagnosis of symmetrical bilateral basal ganglia lesion after the exclusion of other disorders such as neurometabolic disorders, central nervous system infection,
carbon monoxide
intoxication, hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy, tumors and cerebrovascular disorders etc.
...
PMID:[Infantile bilateral necrosis of the striatum of corpus: report of four cases]. 151 18
The diagnosis, management, and long-term outcome of 32 patients with congenital central hypoventilation syndrome are summarized. Sleep hypoventilation was severe in all cases, resulting in an alveolar
carbon dioxide
pressure (mean +/- SEM) of 62 +/- 2.5 mm Hg and a hemoglobin saturation of 65% +/- 3.3% without ventilatory or arousal response. Awake hypoventilation on initial assessment was present in 12 of the 32 patients, resulting in an alveolar
carbon dioxide
pressure of 58 +/- 2.2 mm Hg and a hemoglobin saturation of 59% +/- 7%. Associated conditions included pulmonary hypertension or cor pulmonale or both (78%), heart block and sick sinus syndrome requiring a cardiac pacemaker (two patients), mild atrophy by cranial imaging evidence (40%),
seizures
(72%), normal brain-stem auditory evoked responses in all but one patient tested, ganglioneuroblastomas (one patient), Hirschsprung disease (16%), and ophthalmologic abnormalities (60%). Growth was deficient in 44% of patients; hypotonia or major motor delay or both were apparent in all. Twenty-two patients are living; 12 of them require continuous ventilatory support and 10 breathe spontaneously while awake and require ventilatory support while asleep. Ten patients have died. Autopsy performed in six cases indicated diffuse central nervous system astrocytosis, gliosis, and atrophy but no primary brain-stem abnormality. Although these data support a diffuse central nervous system process, the specific cause and the mode of inheritance remain unclear. With early diagnosis and careful ventilatory management, the sequelae of hypoxia and morbidity should be minimized and long-term outcome improved.
...
PMID:Congenital central hypoventilation syndrome: diagnosis, management, and long-term outcome in thirty-two children. 153 84
This study evaluates the cardiac and neurologic risks associated with the antagonization of the benzodiazepine component of mixed drug overdoses, when cyclic antidepressants are also implicated. Twenty-four mongrel dogs were anesthetized and ventilated. Electroencephalogram, electrocardiogram, and tidal
carbon dioxide
and arterial pressure were continuously recorded. Amitriptyline (1 mg/kg/min) associated with midazolam (1 mg/kg + 1 mg/kg/h) was infused in 12 of the dogs. Midazolam was replaced by saline in the other 12. Drug administration was continued until signs of cardiotoxicity (QRS prolongation greater than 120 milliseconds or sustained arrhythmias) occurred. At that moment, midazolam effects were suddenly reversed by administration of flumazenil 0.2 mg/kg in six dogs out of each group. Placebo was administered in the others. Reactions were observed for the next 120 minutes. Midazolam-induced sedation efficiently protects (P less than .02) against
seizures
due to amitriptyline toxicity. This protective effect is counteracted by flumazenil. Midazolam has limited influence on the cardiac toxic effects of amitriptyline. The bolus of flumazenil is, however, associated with a significant worsening of electrocardiogram disturbances, and two sudden deaths were recorded. The mechanism of this effect remains unclear, as it could be unrelated to the antagonization of midazolam sedation. Given the problem of extrapolating animal data to humans, these results suggest that bolus administration of high doses of flumazenil in mixed intoxication implicating benzodiazepine and cyclic antidepressants has the potential to precipitate convulsions and/or arrhythmias. A slowly titrated administration of the antidote, as usually recommended, could prevent these effects.
...
PMID:Flumazenil in mixed benzodiazepine/tricyclic antidepressant overdose: a placebo-controlled study in the dog. 158 24
Seizure
is a common problem evaluated in pediatric emergency departments. Serum chemistry analysis is often performed as a routine part of the diagnostic evaluation of children who arrive in the ED with
seizure
. From this retrospective study, we sought to determine 1) how often serum electrolytes (Na, K, Cl,
CO2
), total calcium, magnesium, ammonia, and glucose chemistries were performed, 2) the frequency of abnormalities detected, and 3) whether abnormalities resulted in a change in patient care. Three hundred eight ED charts from 12 consecutive months were reviewed. Data collected included age, sex, ED diagnosis, medical history, and physical examination. Charts were also reviewed for diagnostic tests ordered and patient management. Children were classified as having febrile (FS) or nonfebrile
seizures
(NFS) to establish diagnostic evaluation practices for each group as well as to determine rates of laboratory abnormalities. Three hundred eight children were enrolled, 108 (35%) FS and 200 (65%) NFS. The mean ages of FS and NFS patients were 2.1 and 5.7 years, respectively (P less than 0.05, t-test). One hundred twenty-four of 308 (40%) children had at least one test performed; no abnormal test was thought to have caused
seizure
; none was treated. One hundred five of 308 (34%) were experiencing their first
seizure
. There was no difference in the likelihood of having a test ordered for children with a first
seizure
, regardless of
seizure
category. We concluded that 1) abnormal serum electrolytes, total calcium, magnesium, and glucose rarely cause
seizure
in children and 2) routine use of these tests in the ED is costly and does not contribute to
seizure
therapy.
...
PMID:Emergency department laboratory evaluation of children with seizures: dogma or dilemma? 160 83
Tris(2-chloroethyl) phosphate (TRCP) is a flame retardant that has a wide variety of industrial applications. In subchronic studies, oral administration of TRCP to rats and mice has been reported to produce dose-, sex-, and species-dependent lesions in the hippocampal brain region. The present investigation has examined the metabolism, elimination, and regional brain distribution of [14C]TRCP in male and female rats. [14C]TRCP was administered by gavage (0, 175, 350, or 700 mg/kg) and urine, feces, exhaled volatiles,
CO2
, and selected tissues were collected. Regional brain distribution of 14C was determined 2 hr following single doses of TRCP to male and female rats, and 24 hr after a single dose and the last of 14 daily doses of TRCP to female rats. Results of these studies indicate that TRCP is readily absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract, distributed to all brain regions, and that metabolism and excretion are nearly complete in 72 hr. Most of the TRCP-derived radioactivity was excreted in urine (up to 85%), with feces, volatiles, and
CO2
combined accounting for less than 10% of the dose. Predominant signs of toxicity associated with TRCP administration (350 and 700 mg/kg) were
seizures
within 2 hr of treatment, when most of the TRCP-derived radioactivity present in brain tissue was in the form of the parent compound. Traces of inextractable 14C were detected at later times, but this material was not concentrated in brain relative to other tissues.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Brain distribution and fate of tris(2-chloroethyl) phosphate in Fischer 344 rats. 167 50
A multidisciplinary workshop held from September 29 to October 1, 1989, at Airlie House, Warrenton, Virginia, considered the neurologic complications of whooping cough and pertussis vaccine. Pertussis mortality in the U.S. in 2-3/1000 cases.
Seizures
occur in 1.9% of cases, and encephalopathy in 0.3%. Reviewing all data, it appears likely that a combination of one or more bacterial toxins, asphyxia,
CO2
retention and loss of cerebral vascular autoregulation is responsible for neurologic symptoms. The timing of the encephalopathy suggests that it results from increased lysis of bacteria, and release of endotoxin. The encephalopathy is not confined to the paroxysmal phase. In evaluating side-reactions to the vaccine, the following must be kept in mind: 1. Vaccines are not standardized between manufacturers. 2. For a given manufacturer, vaccines are not standard from one batch to the next. 3. Unless the vaccine is properly prepared and refrigerated, its potency and reactivity varies with shelf life. In fact, the whole question of vaccine detoxification has never been systematically investigated. Listed in order of increasing severity, observed adverse reactions include irritability, persistent, unusually high pitched crying, somnolence,
seizures
, a shock-like "hypotensive, hyporesponsive" state, and an encephalopathy. Since the neurologic picture is not specific for pertussis vaccination, its temporal relationship to the vaccination is the critical variable for determining causation. Although the majority of
seizures
following pertussis vaccination are associated with fever, it was the consensus of the neurologists attending the workshop, that these do not represent febrile convulsions, but are non-benign convulsions. The incidence of post-vaccine encephalopathy is difficult to ascertain.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Workshop on neurologic complications of pertussis and pertussis vaccination. 198 Dec 51
The prevalence of kernicterus in our neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) decreased from more than 2/1000 live births in 1980 to none in 1984. To clarify predictors of kernicterus, we examined the medical records of infants born during that time who died between 2 and 28 days of age. Infants were divided into three groups: those with kernicterus, all born before June 10, 1982 (n = 29); contemporaneous controls (n = 28); and infants born after June 10, 1982 (n = 32). Benzyl alcohol was not used after June 10, 1982. Kernicteric infants were more likely than contemporaneous controls to have
seizures
(p less than 0.001). Indices of pulmonary disease, arterial partial pressure of
carbon dioxide
and end-expiratory pressure on the ventilator were higher after 1982. However, exposure to benzyl alcohol was not different in kernicteric infants and contemporaneous controls, suggesting that benzyl alcohol exposure was not the explanation for the decrease in the prevalence of kernicterus in our NICU.
...
PMID:Risk factors associated with kernicterus in the newborn infant: importance of benzyl alcohol exposure. 200 46
Features of typhoid fever were correlated with age and gender through a review of the charts of 552 hospitalized culture-positive patients with diarrhea in Bangladesh.
Seizures
occurred more frequently in children from birth through 10 years of age (5%-11%) and pneumonia more frequently in children from birth through 5 years of age (8%-15%) than in older age groups (P less than .05), whereas intestinal perforation occurred more frequently in patients greater than or equal to 11 years of age (5%-25%) than in younger age groups (P less than .005). Compared with older age groups, children from birth through 10 years of age were more anemic, those from birth through 5 years of age had a higher mean white blood cell count, and those from birth through 1 year of age had a lower mean blood
carbon dioxide
content (all P less than .05). Female patients were more severely anemic than male patients (P less than .05). The case-fatality rate was 4.3% overall, with the highest rates for children from birth through 1 year of age (11%) and adults greater than or equal to 31 years of age (10%). Female patients had a higher case-fatality rate (6%) than male patients (3%), although the difference was not significant (P greater than .05). Death was independently associated with
seizures
, intestinal perforation, pneumonia, and delirium or coma. These results indicated that the patients with typhoid fever who were at highest risk of complications and death were children from birth through 1 year of age and adults greater than or equal to 31 years of age.
...
PMID:Patterns of morbidity and mortality in typhoid fever dependent on age and gender: review of 552 hospitalized patients with diarrhea. 201 39
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