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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (
seizures
)
80,221
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Sixty-seven patients with brain abscess were managed over 19 years (1975-1993). Our series had a 2.5 to 1 male predominance; the age distribution was from 3 days to 81 years. The underlying conditions of hematogenic brain abscesses (n = 33; 49%) included lung infections (n = 16), heart disease (n = 4), sepsis (n = 10), and other foci (n = 3). Otolaryngologic infections led to the abscess in 10 cases; there were 9 traumatic abscesses. The causes remained unknown in 15 cases. There were 47 solitary abscesses (70%) and 20 multiple abscesses. The most frequent presenting signs and symptoms were neurologic deficits (n = 17), disturbances of consciousness (n = 14),
seizures
(n = 6), and headaches, meningism and vomiting (n = 13). Causative organisms were isolated in 39 cases (58%) and included staphylococci (n = 6), streptococci (n = 6), enterobacteriae (n = 2), and anaerobic pathogens (n = 9). The most reliable laboratory sign of inflammation was an elevated ESR (52/59 patients). With the advent of computed tomography, burr
hole
aspiration of the abscess with or without drainage was possible in 30 cases; the mortality in this subgroup was 9%. All 4 patients with surgical excision in the pre CT-era died. The mortality of patients treated with antibiotics only was 62% (18/29). Overall mortality was 37% (25/67), including 5 cases with post mortem-diagnosis of brain abscess. Good recovery was achieved in 29/42 survivors. Predictors of a poor outcome were the patient's age, the level of consciousness, multiple abscesses, polybacterial cultures, and a hematogenic etiology, but not the size of the abscess.
...
PMID:[Bacterial brain abscess--experiences with 67 patients]. 880 80
Between 1990 and 1992 six cases of subdural empyema were surgically treated at the Neurosurgical Division of Emergency Department of Cardarelli Hospital in Naples. Three cases were associated with paranasal sinusitis and three cases with otitis media. Headache and fever were the presenting symptoms in all cases; in only two cases they were associated with
seizures
and altered mental status. CT scans showed convexity low density collections in five cases and multilocalized pus collection in one; concurrent paranasal or mastoid infections were visualized as well. The organisms responsible for the subdural empyema were Peptococcus in four cases, Streptococcus and anaerobius in the other two cases. In five cases surgical treatment consists in pus drainage by selective burr
hole
and placement of a subdural small silicon tube for local antibiotic therapy. In one case with a loculated diffuse empyema, craniotomy was performed in order to provide a better access to all the localizations. In all cases drainage of the wound and intravenous antibiotic therapy were used. Paranasal sinus drainage or mastoidectomy performed by the otolaryngologist when a localized collection of pus was present, grave a quicker regression of symptoms. A full recover of the original neurological status was achieved in all cases; a 20 months mean followup confirms the results.
...
PMID:Surgical treatment of subdural empyema: a critical review. 891 61
The authors report a case of so-called "infected subdural hematoma" as a complication of chronic subdural hematoma. The patient was a 55-year-old man who had sustained a small laceration of the forehead in a traffic accident on March 29, 1995. No fractures were detected on skull roentgenograms, and general and neurological examinations failed to reveal any abnormal findings. In early August 1995, the patient began to experience headaches, and on August 5 he developed a fever of 38 degrees C. On August 8 he suffered a left motor
seizure
and was admitted to our hospital. Laboratory studies revealed a peripheral leukocyte count of 10,800/mm3 and a C-reactive protein level of 18.1 mg/dl. Computed tomography scans showed a thick right fronto-parietal subdural low density mass and a thin left frontal subdural low density mass. An emergency operation was performed via a single right fronto-parietal burr
hole
. A chronic subdural hematoma containing slightly yellowish, bloody, purulent fluid was found beneath an outer membrane. The hematoma was irrigated with physiological saline containing antibiotics, and a drain was inserted into the subdural space. A subdural membrane was also present on the left but it contained no pus. Aggressive antibiotic therapy was performed, and the patient was discharged without any neurological deficit. Histologically the membrane was determined to be the outer membrane of a typical chronic subdural hematoma. Enterococcus faecalis, which has rarely been reported to cause infection of the central nervous system, was detected in a bacterial culture of the pus. Systemic investigation showed no evidence of otorhinologic or other focal infection. The above clinical findings suggested that hematogenous seeding of a chronic subdural hematoma had occurred in this patient. Subdural empyema arising from hematogenous seeding to a pre-existing subdural hematoma by an infection is very rare, but this type of complication must be kept in mind not only in the elderly, infants, and compromised hosts, but in patients without complications as well.
...
PMID:[A case of infected subdural hematoma complicating chronic subdural hematoma in a healthy adult man]. 902 8
The chronic subdural hematoma (CSH) is a disease in elderly patients beyond the 5th decade. Treatment of CSH is normally a burr
hole
trephination and subdural drainage. Although this technique is simple, lethality is reported to be up to 20% in literature. The records of 314 patients with CSH were analyzed. Attention was focussed on complicating diseases and distribution of age. Patients were categorized neurologically before and after trephination using the Bender scale. The portion of patients suffering from cardiological diseases was 14.3%, 6.7% were treated by anticoagulants because of cardiac valve implant. Alcoholics were found in 15.9% of patients and hypertension in 12.8%. Complicating diseases were found in 51.3% of patients. Multiple internal diseases are likely to affect prognosis more than hematoma thickness. These patients also brought about a higher rate of infection (4.8%), secondary hemorrhages (2.5%), pneumonia (3%) and
seizures
(5%) after trephination. Lethality was highest in patients with diabetes mellitus, cardiogenic diseases and hypertension as well as in elderly patients. The latter have also a poor post-operative outcome: 22 patients died. In contrast to hematoma thickness and midline shift, which do not have any influence on outcome, prognosis is mainly determined by age, complicating diseases, hypertension and diabetes mellitus. The chronic subdural hematoma is often found in multi-morbid patients.
...
PMID:[Treatment outcome in patients with chronic subdural hematoma with reference to age and concurrent internal diseases]. 917 74
Three children with intracerebral abscesses were treated endoscopically. Two of the treated abscesses were located in the left temporal lobe and one in the right parietal lobe. The presenting symptoms included headaches,
seizures
, hemiparesis and signs of infection. Burr
hole
craniotomy, insertion of a peelaway sheath, obtaining of a specimen, introduction of endoscope, and complete irrigation under view was performed. After this a draining catheter was positioned in the abscess. All three abscesses grew multiple organisms. The patients received longstanding intravenous treatment with antibiotics. The follow-up period in this group ranges between 5 and 32 months. The initial neurological deficits were relieved in all three patients. The follow-up MRI studies revealed minor residual changes without evidence of significant sequelae. Neuroendoscopic treatment of brain abscesses has additional advantages compared to stereotactic aspiration or more complete drainage and lavage.
...
PMID:Endoscopic treatment of brain abscess in children. 935 89
Chronic hematomas are a common problem during infancy and usually occur as the consequence of trauma. They tend to enlarge and are often managed successfully with repeated subdural taps. In patients with collections that fail to respond to percutaneous drainage, the choice of operative management, including burr
hole
evacuation, shunting, or craniotomy, remains controversial. A new technique, called endoscopic washout, was successfully used in 7 children under the age of 2 years who presented with irritability, vomiting,
seizures
, and rapid head growth. Preoperative computerized tomography (CT) scans demonstrated enlarging, bilateral, chronic subdural collections; these failed to respond to repeated percutaneous taps over 10 days. With the patient positioned supine, bilateral linear incisions were made anterior to the coronal suture in the midpupillary lines and burr holes were placed. After the dura and outer membrane were opened and coagulated with bipolar cautery, a 4-mm steerable fiberscope was introduced into the subdural space to visualize the collections, evacuate any residual clot, and continuously irrigate the space with lactated Ringer's solution warmed to physiologic temperature. No bridging vessels or synechiae were violated; nitrous oxide and hyperventilation were discontinued before removing the fiberscope. The subdural space was irrigated again prior to closure. At follow-up (range 18 months to 8 years), CT scans showed reexpansion of the brain and no reaccumulation of the hematomas. We conclude that the endoscopic washout is a safe, uncomplicated treatment for chronic subdural hematomas in infants; is more effective than treatment with conventional burr holes alone, and eliminates the need for shunting or craniotomy.
...
PMID:Endoscopic washout: a new technique for treating chronic subdural hematomas in infants. 965 43
The authors report on their experience of lesionectomies close to or in the thalamus, basal ganglia, third ventricle and in the temporal lobe. The resection itself is performed stereotactically, MRI or CT guided, either microscopically or endoscopically through a sleeve designed by one of the authors and named PAN working sleeve. Over the last four years this new minimally invasive technique has been successfully applied in 39 cases. Eighteen patients with 11 astrocytoma (6AA, 5All), 5 cavernoma and 2 metastases (melanoma, adenocarcinoma) of the basal ganglion-thalamus area and the trigonum were resected by means of a frontal or an occipital burr-
hole
, whereby in some cases there were subtotal resections. With four of these patients an existing hemiparesis increased by one degree (according to the proposal of the British Medical Research Council I-V). Seventeen patients with lesions in the foramen Monroi and in the third ventricle also underwent operation by means of frontal access, and in each case there was a total resection. Two of the patients required a shunt due to a persistent hydrocephalus internus. In one of these cases there was intraventricular bleeding which necessitated an intra-operative craniotomy. Four patients with intractable epilepsy were operated through a burr-
hole
in the anterior area of the os zygomaticum. Three patients were submitted to a selective resection of mesial structures and one to an anterior temporal lobe resection. To date the four patients have had no further
seizures
and no deficits have been observed.
...
PMID:Minimally invasive lesionectomies through a stereotactically guided working sleeve. 1004 56
The effect of nitrendipine (NTP) alone and in combination with phenytoin (PHT) and valproate (VPA) against maximal electroshock
seizures
(MES) was studied in rats. In addition, the psychomotor effects of NTP alone and in combination with PHT and VPA were evaluated using the following tests: a) rotarod performance; b) spontaneous motor activity; c) despair behavior; d) righting reflex; e)
hole
board test; and f) passive avoidance test. ED50 values of PHT, VPA and NTP were 13,255 and 3.6 mg/kg, respectively. When NTP was combined with PHT or VPA, the ED50 values decreased to 0.9 and 226 mg/kg, respectively. In the psychomotor function tests, for the same degree of protection (50%) afforded against MES, PHT or VPA produced a greater impairment in all the parameters compared to NTP alone or a combination of NTP with PHT or VPA. Furthermore, NTP reversed the depression and long-term memory loss induced by PHT and VPA. Thus, NTP was effective against MES in rats, potentiating the anti-electroshock activity of PHT and VPA and producing less impairment of psychomotor activity. Thus, the agent can be considered a potential antiepileptic warranting further studies.
...
PMID:Anticonvulsant and psychomotor activity of nitrendipine alone and in combination with phenytoin and valproate in rats. 1044 38
Recently, endoscopic procedures have been recommended as the first surgical option for cerebral arachnoid cyst (AC). The author reports seven ACs treated endoscopically and discuss the role of endoscopic fenestration. The age of the patients ranged from two to 62 years. Three ACs were located in the posterior cranial fossa, two in the suprasellar area, one in the middle cranial fossa, and one in the convexity. All cases were examined by cine magnetic resonance (MR) flow study. The patient's symptoms included headache, vomiting, dizziness, problems in balance, visual disturbance, and
seizure
. The author performed a cysto-cisternostomy or cysto-ventriculostomy via a single burr
hole
. The follow-up periods ranged from six to 18 months. There was no mortality or morbidity except one case of intracisternal bleeding during endoscopic procedure. Symptoms were relieved in all seven patients. Follow-up imaging studies revealed a decrease in the size or disappearance of the cysts. The results support that the minimal fenestration procedure as possibly as preserving the internal environment is valuable for the management of ACs.
...
PMID:The role of endoscopic fenestration procedures for cerebral arachnoid cysts. 1048 26
A program of repeated electrical (kindling-like) stimulation of the medial preoptic area (MPOA) or the medial amygdala (MedAmyg) on maternal and other behaviors were investigated. Stimulation was applied daily for 14 days (or until a stage 3 motor
seizure
was observed) using 2 s trains of biphasic square wave pulses at 60 Hz, 1 ms duration and 300-500 microA. Confirmation of afterdischarge using these parametres was established. In the first experiment, maternally experienced (but not post-partum) MedAmyg stimulated animals became maternal more slowly than did MedAmyg not stimulated animals or than MPOA stimulated animals. In the second experiment, virgin animals were used. MPOA stimulation enhanced the female's preference for pup associated environments in the conditioned place preference (CPP) paradigm. MedAmyg stimulation had no effect on CPP performance, but produced a decreased preference for pup odors in a modified
hole
board test and increased 'anxiety' in the open field. These results confirm that the MPOA and the MedAmyg are involved in facilitating and attenuating maternal responsiveness and related (precursor?) behaviors, respectively. It appears that chronic (kindling-like) stimulation of these neural substrates enhances their functions.
...
PMID:The long lasting effects of electrical simulation of the medial preoptic area and medial amygdala on maternal behavior in female rats. 1051 73
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