Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (seizures)
80,221 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In a patient with primary hypoparathyroidism the disease ran for years only generalized convulsions resistant to antiepileptic medication, and was lately complicated by bilateral cataracts. Low serum calcium and elevated serum phosphorus found on occasion of a grand mal status resistant to routine treatment and to intravenous barbiturates revealed the correct diagnosis. The seizures have been suppressed by normalyzing the serum calcium levels. The pathophysiology of convulsive seizures during hypocalcemia is discussed, and the possibility is raised that antiepileptic drugs could have contributed to hypocalcemia through a vitamin D deficiency.
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PMID:[Idiopathic hypoparathyroidism and convulsive seizures]. 746 5

Fahr's disease associates various degrees of neuropsychological impairment and calcium deposits in the basal ganglia. We report 3 cases. The first case was a 54-year-old man with hemichorea of one-year duration. Laboratory results demonstrated idiopathic hypoparathyroidism. In the second case, a 23-year-old man treated for epilepsia for 8 years was hospitalized for subintrant episodes and hemichorea. Dysmorphism and laboratory results led to the diagnosis of pseudo-hypothyroidism. The third case was a 62-year-old woman with generalized seizures of epilepsia and dementia of two-month duration. Physical examination revealed extra-pyramidal rigidity. Hyperparathyroidism due to an adenoma was confirmed histologically. In all three patients, correction of phosphocalcium levels led to clinical improvement, particularly with disappearance of the epileptic seizures and abnormal movements. Clinical expression of Fahr's syndrome varies greatly. Symptoms include psychiatric disorders, epileptic seizures, extra-pyramidal syndrome and various neurological conditions. Diagnosis requires CT brain scan which identifies calcium deposits in the basal ganglia. The main cause is hypoparathyroidism, whether primary or post-operative. Cases due to other causes of dysparathyroidism are rare. The pathophysiology of this condition remains unknown and results of treatment are often unsatisfactory. Since correcting the impaired calcium phosphorus metabolism often leads to considerable improvement, it is essential to systematically search for dysparathyroidism in patients presenting with neuropsychologic manifestations associated with calcifications of the basal ganglia.
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PMID:[Fahr syndrome and dysparathyroidism. 3 cases]. 750 22

Vitamin D dependent rickets type II is an autosomal recessive disease caused by the vitamin D defective receptor. More than 200 patients with different types of lower limb deformities were detected in a rural area of the Cauca department in the southwest part of Colombia. Patients were well nourished and in good physical condition in spite of their deformities. None of them presented alopecia, myopathy, seizures or aminoaciduria. Serum analysis showed significantly lower serum calcium as compared to normal relatives, though in the normal low range, normal phosphorus, high alkaline phosphatase, normal 25-hydroxyvitamin D3 and high 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3, indicating target organ resistance. The cDNA analysis showed normal nucleotide sequence. We suggest that our patients represent a distinct form of receptor-positive resistance to vitamin D. This report is the first extensive study on this class of patients.
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PMID:Vitamin D dependent rickets type II and normal vitamin D receptor cDNA sequence. A cluster in a rural area of Cauca, Colombia, with more than 200 affected children. 758 52

The dynamic effects of the non-competitive NMDA receptor antagonist, MK-801 on brain metabolism were investigated over 105 minutes in unanesthetized rats by proton and phosphorus NMR spectroscopy. MK-801 (0.5 and 5 mg/kg, i.p) induced no changes in intracellular pH, and in phosphocreatine, ATP, and inorganic phosphate levels, indicating that the drug preserved energy and intracellular pH homeostasis. There were transient increases in lactate after both doses of MK-801, suggesting early activation of glycolysis, which was not immediately matched by enhanced oxidative metabolism or by enhanced blood flow. Thereafter, lactate control level was not restored after 0.5 mg/kg whereas it was restored after 5 mg/kg in spite of a sustained metabolic activation. The low dose of MK-801 also caused a continuous decrease in cerebral aspartate level (-38%) which is thought to match the enhanced energy demand, whereas the high dose caused shorter and smaller changes. The intracerebral glucose level rose after MK-801 injection, indicating that brain tissue had an adequate or even excessive supply of glucose. Glucose time course seemed to closely match the changes in blood flow elicited by MK-801. This is the first study giving the metabolic pattern of a pharmacological activation. We demonstrate an excess of glycolysis over oxidative metabolism in the early time similar to that following physiological and pathophysiological states such as photic stimulation and seizures. The difference between the effects of the two doses of MK-801 suggests that the adjustment of cerebral metabolism to MK-801 activation is faster and greater with the high dose than with the low dose.
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PMID:Cerebral metabolic changes induced by MK-801: a 1D (phosphorus and proton) and 2D (proton) in vivo NMR spectroscopy study. 803 9

Phosphorus magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging has previously demonstrated localized metabolic abnormalities within the epileptogenic region in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy, including alkalosis, increased inorganic phosphate level, and decreased phosphomonoester levels. We studied 8 patients with frontal lobe epilepsy, finding interictal alkalosis in the epileptogenic region compared to the contralateral frontal lobe in all patients (7.10 +/- 0.05 vs 7.00 +/- 0.06, p < 0.001). Seven patients exhibited decreased phosphomonoester levels in the epileptogenic frontal lobe compared to the contralateral frontal lobe (16.0 +/- 6.0 vs 23.0 +/- 4.0, p < 0.01). In contrast to findings in temporal lobe epilepsy, inorganic phosphate level was not increased in the epileptogenic region. Based on values derived from normal control subjects, 5 patients had elevated pH in the seizure focus and 2 patients had decreased phosphomonoesters while none had abnormalities in the contralateral frontal lobe. These data suggest that magnetic resonance spectroscopy will be useful in the presurgical evaluation of patients with frontal lobe epilepsy.
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PMID:Phosphorus magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging in patients with frontal lobe epilepsy. 810 2

Six female patients with hypoparathyroidism (2 idiopathic and 4 postoperative cases following total thyroidectomy) were examined with brain CT scans; 4 of them underwent MR exams too. Two patients presented with no symptoms, 4 exhibited extrapyramidal syndrome, tetany, fainting seizures or ischemic attacks and only 2 presented with abnormal calcium-phosphorus balance. CT showed calcifications of the basal nuclei in 5 patients. The caudate nucleus was always affected (100%). The calcifications were in the putamen, globus pallidus and thalamus in 4 cases (80%), in the dentate nuclei, centrum semiovale and cerebral cortex in 2 cases (40%) and in the mesencephalic gray matter in 1 case (20%). In one case only CT failed to detect the abnormalities, which were nevertheless depicted by MRI. In the other 3 patients who underwent MRI, CT findings were confirmed as low-signal areas on SE T1- and T2-weighted MR scans where the calcifications were present, but areas of increased signal intensity were also evident on SE T2-weighted images; in one patient, low-signal areas were surrounded by a ring of increased signal intensity on SE T1-weighted scans. Low-signal areas reflect an early stage of calcium deposition; on the other hand, high-signal areas are probably caused by proteins and mucopolysaccharides or by liquid pools secondary to endothelial membrane incompetence. CT better defined the site and extent of the calcifications which may be found in both idiopathic and postoperative hypoparathyroidism, in symptomatic or asymptomatic patients. On the other hand, MRI seems to be capable of depicting the various stages of calcium deposition on the basis of the presence of reduced or increased SE T2 signal intensity.
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PMID:[Calcification of the basal nuclei in hypoparathyroidism. The computed and magnetic resonance tomographic aspects]. 812 14

Clinical signs that included lethargy, inappetence, diarrhea, and vomiting and that progressed to seizures were observed in 40 feeder pigs that were approximately 70 days old. The pigs were fed ground red wheat and whole milk and were housed in a barn that did not allow exposure to direct sunlight. Analysis of samples of feed obtained from the farm indicated inadequate quantities of calcium and phosphorus as well as a low ratio of these 2 nutrients. Serum and tissue concentrations of vitamin A were less than normal. Low serum calcium concentrations, high serum phosphorus concentrations, and high alkaline phosphatase and creatine kinase activities were compatible with low vitamin D concentrations.
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PMID:Seizures and acute death attributable to hypovitaminosis A and suspected hypovitaminosis D in feeder pigs. 849 85

Hypophosphatemia is uncommon in cats, but it has been reported in association with diabetes mellitus and hepatic lipidosis, where it can cause hemolysis, rhabdomyopathy, depression, seizures, and coma. The purpose of this article is to describe 9 cats that developed low serum phosphorus concentrations (< 2.5 mg/dL) subsequent to enteral alimentation. Serum biochemical analyses from more than 6,000 cats were reviewed. The medical records of all cats with hypophosphatemia were examined for history of enteral alimentation; diabetic cats were excluded from the study. Nine cats, ranging in age from 3 to 17 years, were identified. All cats had normal serum phosphorus concentrations before tube feeding began. Onset of hypophosphatemia occurred 12 to 72 hours after initiation of enteral alimentation, and the nadir for phosphorus concentrations ranged from 0.4 to 2.4 mg/dL. Hemolysis occurred in 6 of the 9 cats. Hypophosphatemia secondary to enteral alimentation is an uncommon clinical finding in cats. Cats with high alanine aminotransferase activity, hyperbilirubinemia, and weight loss should be closely monitored for hypophosphatemia during the first 72 hours of enteral alimentation.
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PMID:Hypophosphatemia associated with enteral alimentation in cats. 852 19

Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment of biochemical abnormalities accompanying neonatal seizures is important for effective seizure control and to avoid further brain damage. The present study was carried out on 35 neonates to determine the frequency of various biochemical abnormalities in neonatal seizures. Diagnostic evaluation included estimation of levels of serum calcium, phosphorus, magnesium, sodium, potassium, zinc, and blood glucose. Two-thirds of the neonates with seizures had biochemical disturbances in their sera. A variety of abnormalities occurred in asphyxiated infants, including hyponatremia, hypoglycemia, hypocalcemia, and hypomagnesemia. Primary metabolic disorders accounted for one-forth of the cases of neonatal seizures, the most common being hypoglycemia, hypoglycemia/hypocalcemia, and hypocalcemia/hyperphosphatemia. Inappropriate intrauterine growth, inadequate feeding, and feeding with cow's milk were the main risk factors for primary metabolic seizures. Hyponatremia was a frequent finding in seizures resulting from brain damage like birth asphyxia, meningitis, and intracranial hemorrhage. No infant had hypernatremia, hyperkalemia, hypokalemia, or low serum zinc.
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PMID:Biochemical abnormalities in neonatal seizures. 863 5

Brain creatine kinase (CK) catalyzed phosphorus fluxes between phosphocreatine (PCr) and ATP and changes in reactant concentrations were measured using [31P] nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy ([31P]NMR) before and during pentylenetetrazole-induced seizures in 7 and 21 day old rats. The CK rate constants measured before seizures were three times higher in the older than in the younger rats. The rate constants increased 60% during seizures in the older rats but did not change or decreased in the younger. Small decreases in PCr were seen during seizures at both ages. A small decrease in ATP was seen at 7 days but not at 21 days.
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PMID:Brain creatine kinase reaction rates and reactant concentrations during seizures in developing rats. 916 86


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