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

A patient with a benign chromophobe adenoma, who had incomplete surgical removal followed by radiotherapy, continued to have epileptic seizures up to two or three times a day. She was studied with positron emission tomography using 18F-2-deoxyglucose (FDG). This technique showed a high level of glucose utilization in the area of the operated tumor but also clear reduction of glucose utilization in the left medial temporal region adjacent to the sella and the scar tissue from the neoplasm. This area of reduced glucose utilization corresponded well to the same finding observed in other patients with complex partial epilepsy. A left temporal anterior lobectomy was carried out followed by improved control of the epilepsy. Positron emission tomography using FDG, together with electrophysiological examinations, may assist in the management of epilepsy related to pituitary tumors.
...
PMID:Pituitary adenoma with seizures: PET demonstration of reduced glucose utilization in the medial temporal lobe. 348 98

We report on a 13-year-old girl with late infantile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (NCL) in whom PET scanning with [18F]-2-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose ([18F]/FDG) was performed. Early psychomotor development was normal. At the age of 2 years, neurological signs such as hypotonia and incoordination appeared, followed by visual failure and ataxia. At the age of 4, funduscopic examination showed macular degeneration and papillary atrophy. At the age of 9, myoclonic jerks were observed; subsequently, generalized seizures together with failing vision, mental deterioration, and visual and auditory hallucinations appeared. Brain MRI showed severe cortical and subcortical atrophy. A skin biopsy detected the presence of 'finger-print' inclusions in the cytoplasm of smooth muscle fibers. Late infantile NCL (Jansky-Bielschowsky disease) was diagnosed. FDG/PET revealed a severe reduction of metabolism in all the cortical and subcortical structures. A regional analysis of the distribution of the tracer revealed marked bilateral hypometabolism, particularly in calcarine, lateral, occipital, and temporal cortices and in the thalamus.
...
PMID:Positron emission tomography in neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (Jansky-Bielschowsky disease): a case report. 757 68

We used FDG-PET to measure interictal glucose metabolism in 16 children and adolescents (mean age 14.7 years) and complex partial seizures (CPS) (mean seizure onset age 5.0 years). Video-EEG localized the epileptic foci. Glucose metabolism was determined in 14 paired anatomic areas using a standard template. PET hypometabolism was defined as greater than 15% asymmetry. Nine of the 13 (69%) patients with a unilateral EEG focus had regional hypometabolism ipsilateral to the epileptogenic zone. Three subjects had bilateral EEG foci; all had nonfocal PET. MRI (15 patients) concurred with EEG and PET in two, and was normal in seven of nine with focal hypometabolism. One of seven patients with normal PET had a focal MRI abnormality. FDG-PET results are similar to those found in adults, but are present earlier in the natural history of CPS (9.7 vs 22.2 years duration epilepsy) than previously reported. The presence of FDG-PET hypometabolism may be associated with a poor response to drug treatment. PET can identify metabolic abnormalities associated with epileptic foci in children and adolescents and is useful in directing surgical intervention for the control of refractory complex partial epilepsy.
...
PMID:FDG-PET in children and adolescents with partial seizures: role in epilepsy surgery evaluation. 771 62

Medically intractable epilepsy, defined as the clinical attacks occurring at least once a month in spite of appropriate antiepileptic drug treatments, is one of the commonest disorders in the clinical neurology. Since surgical treatment of epilepsy is successful in selected patients, it is most important to delineate the epileptogenic focus and functions of adjacent cortical areas as precisely as possible. Recent advances in electrophysiology, magnetoencephalography, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), functional imaging techniques such as positron emission tomography (PET) and single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) have enabled us to elucidate the epileptogenic focus noninvasively without involving the conventional invasive EEG recording techniques. We evaluated 37 patients with intractable partial seizures by using prolonged video/EEG monitoring with sphenoidal or T1/T2 electrodes. MRI, ictal and interictal SPECT for blood flow measurement and interictal FDG-PET for glucose metabolism. Among 20 patients with intractable epilepsy who had a single ictal focus, PET, ictal SPECT and MRI findings were correlated with the ictal EEG finding with the concordance rate of 100, 86 and 75%, respectively. If all of those findings were convergent upon a single focus, then the surgical treatment with intraoperative corticography is most likely effective without employing any invasive recording. If those findings were divergent, then the invasive evaluation will be indicated.
...
PMID:[Intractable epilepsy--neurophysiological evaluation and indication for surgical treatment]. 777 21

We report on 30 adult patients with intractable complex partial seizure (CPS) of the temporal lobe origin who received anterior temporal lobectomy. The average follow-up period was 41 months. The age of onset was younger and the duration of epilepsy was longer in the non-mass lesion group than in the mass lesion group. Postoperatively, 21 patients (70%) were seizure-free, four patients (13%) had only rare seizures (less than three attacks per year), three patients (10%) achieved a remarkable reduction (more than 50%) of seizure frequency, and two patients (7%) showed no worthwhile improvement. Based on our experience, anterior temporal lobectomy is an effective and safe procedure for adult patients with intractable CPS. For diagnosis, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) yielded a higher sensitivity rate than computed tomography (CT), especially in the group without mass lesions. Positron emission tomography using 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG-PET) was superior to single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) which had a relatively high false localization rate. With high resolution MRI and FDG-PET, localization of the epileptogenic zone was more accurate. A preresection electrocorticogram (ECoG) was used to confirm the epileptogenic focus during the operation. The residual spikes on the postresection ECoG did not necessarily predict a poor seizure control outcome after anterior temporal lobectomy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Temporal lobectomy in adults with intractable epilepsy. 791 72

Using PET, reduced glucose metabolism (rCMRglu) and increased binding of the mu opiate receptor ligand 11C-carfentanil have been demonstrated in lateral temporal cortex overlying mesial temporal epileptic foci. Binding of the non-specific opiate receptor ligand 11C-diprenorphine (DPN) to lateral temporal cortex has not shown consistent asymmetries. We measured rCMRglu with 18F-FDG and binding of 11C-diprenorphine in two patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) before and 5 months after selective amygdalo-hippocampectomy (both patients were seizure-free post-operatively). Pre-operatively, in both patients rCMRglu was decreased in mesial temporal lobe (MTL) (asymmetry index AI = -9.1 and 9.0) ipsilateral to the EEG focus. A more marked reduction was seen in ipsilateral lateral temporal cortex (LTC) (AI = -32.0 and 18.9). DPN binding was reduced in MTL and LTC (AI MTL = -9.3 and 16.2; AI LTC = -8.0 and 5.5) ipsilateral to the focus, but was within 2 SD of the normal range. Post-operatively, the reduction of rCMRglu in LTC was accentuated in one patient and decreased in the other (AI = -23.1 and 45.7) while there was a further reduction of DPN binding in LTC in both patients (AI = -27.8 and 9.8). These preliminary results in only two patients are compatible with downregulation of opiate receptors in LTC after removal of the epileptic focus or post-operative neuronal dysfunction.
...
PMID:Quantification of opiate receptors in two patients with mesiobasal temporal lobe epilepsy, before and after selective amygdalohippocampectomy, using positron emission tomography. 795 34

Spectral analysis of interictal background EEG activity recorded through foramen ovale (FO) electrodes during monitoring (mean 5.8 days per patient) was studied in 10 medically refractory complex partial seizure (CPS) patients who were candidates for epilepsy surgery. Data of the spectral analysis was plotted as compressed spectral array (CSA) with spectral edge frequency (SEF) markers. For each patient, time-varying fluctuations of the SEF markers were compared visually and by a computer-assisted method between two symmetrical FO electrode EEG channels recording from both mesiobasotemporal lobes (MTL). The amount of asymmetrical variations of the SEF markers ("rigidity" phenomenon) was first determined visually and then quantified by the computer-assisted method. These findings were correlated with the results of other clinical tests, including FO electrode-recorded seizure onset (FO ict), positron emission tomography with [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG-PET), and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to investigate whether the rigidity phenomenon could lateralize the primary epileptogenic zone. The rigid side had 80, 70, and 60% coincidence rates with the pathologic side indicated by FDG-PET, FO ict, and MRI, respectively, in a single test. We conclude that the rigidity phenomenon of FO electrode-recorded interictal background EEG activity is a valuable sign for lateralization of the primary epileptogenic zone in MTL epilepsy. The relative invariance of SEF may be caused by interictal deafferentation of epileptic neurons.
...
PMID:Regional "rigidity" of background EEG activity in the epileptogenic zone. 802 94

The pathophysiologic and clinical significance of periodic lateralized epileptiform discharges (PLEDs) is unclear; whether PLEDs represent an ictal condition that should be treated remains uncertain. We performed FDG-positron emission computed tomography (FDG-PET) in a patient with PLEDs at 3 days, 18 days, and 10 weeks after onset. During left temporal PLEDs, the initial scan showed intense hypermetabolism of the left mesiotemporal region. The second scan, performed when PLEDs were resolving, displayed reduced hypermetabolism. The follow-up scan, when PLEDs had resolved, showed left temporal hypometabolism. These findings, together with clinical evidence from the literature, are compatible with the interpretation that PLEDs represent partial status epilepticus (SE); whether vigorous therapy is required to prevent neuronal damage from this focal seizure activity remains uncertain.
...
PMID:Markedly increased mesiotemporal lobe metabolism in a case with PLEDs: further evidence that PLEDs are a manifestation of partial status epilepticus. 782 Dec 81

In the Netherlands all patients who are considered candidates for surgical treatment of their epilepsy are referred to the Dutch Workgroup for Functional Neurosurgery. Resective neurosurgery in partial epilepsy is a focus of special interest of national health authorities. Annually 15-20 patients can now be operated upon. Presurgical evaluation includes a.o. 18/FDG PET. For depth-EEG recording a specially designed method of "Combined Subdural and Depth-EEG Recording" is used which has been described previously. 70 patients underwent depth-EEG recording with the combined method. In 4.2% of the patients there were transient complications, in 1.4% there was a possibly permanent slight neurological deficit caused by the method. Fifty-six patients were evaluated at least one year after their surgical treatment (median follow-up 3 years). In the frontal lobe group comprising 9 patients 56% were seizure-free, 76% benefited from the treatment. In the temporal lobe group with 47 patients 68% were seizure-free and 92% benefited. No patient deteriorated from the resection. Permanent morbidity was nil.
...
PMID:Functional neurosurgery in the treatment of epilepsy in The Netherlands. Aspects of presurgical evaluation and the contribution of subdural and stereotactically implanted depth electrodes in the Dutch Workgroup for Functional Surgery. 827 93

The aim of this study was to evaluate, in 16 patients with drug-resistant partial epilepsy who were waiting to undergo surgical treatment, the relation between positron emission tomography (PET) findings with fluorine-18 fluorodeoxyglucose ([18F]FDG) in the interictal state and the different stereo-electroencephalography (SEEG) patterns that characterize: (a) the epileptogenic zone (low-voltage fast-activity discharge before or concurrent with ictal clinical symptoms), (b) the irritative zone (spikes, spikes and waves, isolated or grouped in short bursts) and (c) the lesional zone (continuous, sometimes polyrhythmic slow waves or continuous delta waves or very important voltage depression). SEEG was performed following an individually defined electrode implantation strategy. Whereas at least one area of hypometabolism was detected by visual interpretation of PET/[18F]FDG images in all the subjects in the study, there was poor agreement between PET/[18F]FDG quantitative measures of regional metabolism and SEEG findings. Normal metabolic rates were found in up to 62% of the areas with abnormal SEEG activity, independent of the type of electrical activity, i.e. epileptogenic, irritative, or lesional, while abnormal metabolic rates were found in up to 23% of the areas with normal SEEG activity. In conclusion, whereas the visual interpretation of interictal studies of glucose utilization in our series of drug-resistant epileptic patients consistently allowed the localization of an area of temporal hypometabolism, the quantitative and regional metabolic analysis demonstrated that such a finding is not specifically related to any of the three very different SEEG patterns (epileptogenic, irritative, lesional) or combinations thereof. These results complement those of previous interictal and ictal single-photon emission tomographic studies and of receptor studies in epileptics, suggesting functional and biochemical heterogeneity within the interictal hypoperfused/hypometabolic area in epileptic patients, and contribute to the debate on the use and interpretation of interictal PET/[18F]FDG studies in patients with medically refractory partial seizures.
...
PMID:Double-blind stereo-EEG and FDG PET study in severe partial epilepsies: are the electric and metabolic findings related? 885 49


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>