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Query: UMLS:C0038220 (
status epilepticus
)
7,272
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) represents the procedure of choice for detection of anatomical lesions in epilepsy. Vascular malformations in central nervous system, such as cavernoma, can cause symptomatic epilepsy. We describe a case of ictal
aphasia
as manifestation of a partial
status epilepticus
probably due to a mutual interaction between a recent bleeding cavernoma and a concomitant reduction of antiepileptic treatment in a long-lasting misdiagnosed symptomatic epilepsy. We conclude that MRI is a mandatory diagnostic method to identify structural abnormalities underlying epilepsy in all patients affected by recurrent focal seizures independent of the duration of epilepsy.
...
PMID:ICTAL aphasia as manifestation of partial status epilepticus in a long-lasting misdiagnosed symptomatic epilepsy: an emblematic case. 1922 20
Hemiplegic migraine (HM) in the setting of Sturge-Weber syndrome (SWS) has been previously described. Here, we report clinical and multimodal imaging data on a 21-year-old man with SWS and HM, who presented during an acute HM attack with a dense left-hemispheric syndrome (expressive
aphasia
and right sensorimotor hemiplegia), lasting for more than 10 days. Repeated EEGs were without evidence of
status epilepticus
. Consistent with previous findings in prolonged migraine aura, perfusion computed tomography demonstrated left-hemispheric hyperperfusion on day 7. 18F-FDG positron emission tomography (day 7) revealed left-hemispheric hypermetabolism. After 14 days, the patient was symptom-free and discharged home. Follow-up after 30 days showed normal neurological status. Our observation confirms and reinforces the comorbidity of SWS and HM and shows that prolonged HM attacks are associated with complex changes of both cerebral perfusion and glucose metabolism. A pathophysiological model explaining both the association between SWS/HM and the observed imaging changes is presented.
...
PMID:A case of Sturge-Weber syndrome with symptomatic hemiplegic migraine: clinical and multimodality imaging data during a prolonged attack. 1973 61
The 2009 pandemic influenza A (H1N1) has been recognized to cause neurological complications including seizures and encephalopathy. We identified 18 children with 2009 H1N1 influenza and neurological complications from first and second wave activity, and compared characteristics to seasonal influenza. Seizures, encephalopathy, and
status epilepticus
were common presentations. Focal neurological symptoms persisted in 22% of patients at discharge. Compared to seasonal influenza, patients with pandemic 2009 influenza were more likely to have encephalopathy, focal neurological findings,
aphasia
, and abnormal electroencephalographic findings. In addition, we noted a trend toward heightened neurological complications following second wave influenza activity.
...
PMID:Heightened neurologic complications in children with pandemic H1N1 influenza. 2086 62
Ictal
aphasia
in adults is a rare phenomenon. Most reported cases manifest with non-fluent (Broca)
aphasia
. Ictal fluent (Wernicke)
aphasia
is less common. We report a 47-year-old, right-handed woman that presented with recurrent episodes of non-convulsive seizures in the form of Wernicke's aphasia for 2 weeks. An MRI of the brain showed an old cerebral infarction in the left parieto-occipital area. Scalp EEG revealed continuous periodic sharp waves at the left temporal regions with diffusion to the whole left hemisphere and at occasions to the right. This is followed by variable periods of post ictal slowing. Recurrence of the described ictal pattern was noted. Management of
status epilepticus
was started in the form of intravenous diazepam and a loading dose of phenytoin and phenobarbitone. After treatment, she improved clinically and the EEG improved with disappearance of the left temporal ictal rhythm and normalization of the EEG background. Thus, establishing the diagnosis of non-convulsive partial
status epilepticus
manifesting as ictal
aphasia
.
...
PMID:Non-convulsive status epilepticus presenting with Wernicke's aphasia. 2104 32
Postictal
aphasia
may be a feature of Todd's paralysis or the presentation of aphasic nonconvulsive
status epilepticus
(NCSE). We describe a 74-year-old woman with three episodes of aphasic
status epilepticus
after prolonged generalized tonic-clonic seizures. In the first episode, the NCSE was not definitively diagnosed, but an increase in the epileptic medication led to resolution of the epileptic activity within 2 weeks. During the second episode, NCSE was terminated within 7 days under intensified antiepileptic treatment. In the third episode, phenytoin treatment led to intoxication and resulted in further treatment on an intensive care unit. The patient required several months to recover from this episode. NCSE in the elderly is difficult to recognize, especially when it presents as a prolonged postictal deficit like
aphasia
. Once diagnosed it has to be treated carefully, because in the elderly, aggressive treatment strategies may be associated with a high risk of adverse events.
...
PMID:Recurrent aphasic status epilepticus after prolonged generalized tonic-clonic seizures versus a special feature of Todd's paralysis. 2113 Dec 38
The goal of this report is to review the relationships between Landau-Kleffner syndrome (LKS), electrical
status epilepticus
during sleep (ESES), and continuous spike-waves during sleep (CSWS). LKS is a clinical syndrome involving mainly acquired
aphasia
and sometimes seizures. Other clinical findings include cognitive impairments and global regression of behavior. The EEG may evolve from more benign conditions into ESES (or CSWS), seen in 50% of patients with LKS, or may also show focal findings. Seizures include atypical absence, generalized tonic-clonic, atonic, and partial motor attacks. Effective medications are discussed. The EEG patterns CSWS and ESES are likely equivalent terms. CSWS is used by some authors, and ESES by others. Patients with these patterns usually show mental retardation, seizures, and global regression. More benign EEG patterns, like focal discharges, may develop into these more severe generalized patterns, which are associated with atypical absences, negative myoclonus, and cognitive disturbances. Memory disorders are common, because the nearly continuous generalized discharges in sleep do not allow for the memory consolidation that also occurs during sleep. Medications and possible etiologies are discussed.
...
PMID:A review of the relationships between Landau-Kleffner syndrome, electrical status epilepticus during sleep, and continuous spike-waves during sleep. 2124 7
We report a case of limbic encephalitis repeated aphasic
status epilepticus
with periodic lateralized epileptiform discharges (PLEDs). A 51-year-old man developed convulsions, psychiatric symptoms such as anxiety, phobia and ease of anger, and Wernicke's aphasia. Analysis of the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) showed increase of leukocyte count (148/microl, mononuclear cells). Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed hyperintensity lesions in the left medial temporal area and basal frontal area on T2-weighted and fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) images. The electroencephalography (EEG) showed PLEDs over the left hemisphere, occurring at intervals of 0.5-1 Hz. Although his limbic symptoms improved, Wernicke's aphasia occurred periodically with PLEDs appearance. After the administration of antiepileptic drugs, his language performance improved, and PLEDs were completely disappeared. We diagnosed him limbic encephalitis with non-convulsive repeated aphasic
status epilepticus
with periodic lateralized epileptiform discharges. Aphasic
status epilepticus
should be considered in the patients with limbic encephalitis, and careful evaluation of
aphasia
and EEG should be necessary to diagnose of aphasic
status epilepticus
.
...
PMID:[A case of limbic encephalitis repeated aphasic status epilepticus with periodic lateralized epileptiform discharges]. 2140 15
Stuttering is a repetitive, iterative disfluency of speech, and is usually seen as a developmental problem in childhood. Acquired causes in adults include strokes and medications. When stuttering occurs with seizure-like events, it is usually attributed to psychogenic nonepileptic seizures. We describe an elderly man who experienced personality change and bouts of stuttering, followed by anarthria with preserved writing and then
aphasia
affecting written and uttered language, and ending with confusion. EEG recordings showed nonconvulsive
status epilepticus
(NCSE) with focality in the left frontal region followed by bifrontal NCSE. This case enlarges our understanding of the behavioral correlates of focal frontal seizures to include simple partial seizures with speech and then language output disturbances (aphemia, then
aphasia
), progressing to complex partial phenomenology in the setting of frontal NCSE.
...
PMID:Frontal lobe nonconvulsive status epilepticus: a case of epileptic stuttering, aphemia, and aphasia--not a sign of psychogenic nonepileptic seizures. 2154 61
Although the hippocampus has not typically been identified as part of the language and
aphasia
circuit, recent evidence suggests that the hippocampus is closely related to naming, word priming, and anomic
aphasia
. A 59-year old woman with limbic encephalitis of possible autoimmune etiology, after recovery of consciousness, presented with severe memory impairment in both anterograde and retrograde modalities, episodes of fear, hallucination and convulsion, and transient fluent, phonemic paraphasia, together with small sharp waves diffusely by EEG. Brain MRI revealed bilateral symmetric, discrete lesions in the body to the infundibulum of the hippocampus.The transient phonemic paraphasia noted in our patient may have been a result of primary damage in the hippocampus and its fiber connection to the Wernicke's area or secondary partial
status epilepticus
that might have originated in the hippocampus.
...
PMID:Transient phonemic paraphasia by bilateral hippocampus lesion in a case of limbic encephalitis. 2157 44
Epileptic seizures are very common in brain tumors, depending on histology and tumor site. In low-grade gliomas, it can be the only symptom reaching the 100% of incidence. Pathophysiology is multifactorial and still not perfectly understood. In a high percentage of cases, epilepsy is pharmacoresistant. Surgical resection of tumors can cure it. It happens more easily in low-grade gliomas, with a preoperative epilepsy evaluation, followed by a tailored surgery, not limited to lesionectomy, and including the peritumoral epileptic focus. In high-grade gliomas, postoperative epilepsy recurrence cannot only be due to tumor recurrence, but also to bad pharmacological compliance, or to pharmacoresistance. Seizures may be clustered in a non-convulsive
status epilepticus
. This condition must be recognized, because it may mimic a neurological worsening due to other reasons, as it presents with confusion,
aphasia
, and disorientation. EEG monitoring can help recognize the status. The treatment does not differ from that of non-convulsive status, due to other etiologies, but non-inducing AEDs are preferred.
...
PMID:Non-convulsive status epilepticus in brain tumors. 2198 89
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