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Query: UMLS:C0038220 (
status epilepticus
)
7,272
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Clinical electroencephalography is a relatively simple and inexpensive diagnostic tool with a high sensitivity for diffuse organic encephalopathy of various aetiologies but with a rather low specificity for the type of diagnosis. The highest sensitivity is shown in DAT and Parkinson dementia, and in these conditions the degree of EEG abnormality is correlated with the disease severity. Quantification of EEG makes these correlations more reliable and provides a method for monitoring therapeutic effects. Dementias with predominantly frontal pathology show much less EEG abnormality, and in these conditions the EEG is often normal despite obvious clinical dementia. Also, alcohol dementias often show normal EEG patterns. At an early stage of clinical evaluation, EEG may be useful in the discrimination of organic dementia from pseudodementia, because EEG is usually normal in depression, confusion, agitation and other psychiatric conditions. In pseudodementia due to intoxication with sedatives the EEG is usually dominated by diffuse beta activity. At the stage of differential diagnosis of an organic brain disorder, EEG cannot reliably discriminate between encephalopathies secondary to
hydrocephalus
, AIDS, cerebrovascular disease, B12 deficiency and primary degenerative diseases such as DAT. More specific EEG patterns are seen in acute cerebrovascular lesions, metabolic encephalopathies, i.e. of hepatic origin, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, herpes encephalitis, and nonconvulsive
status epilepticus
as possible causes of a rapidly deteriorating mental and neurological condition. Repeated EEG recordings over time would add significantly to the diagnostic information. New techniques such as topographical brain mapping, analysis of the EEG during REM sleep, coherence analysis of the EEG activity, and the combination of quantified EEG techniques with evoked potentials and event-related potentials will presumably add to the sensitivity as well as the specificity of the electrophysiological methods in the diagnosis of dementia.
...
PMID:Electroencephalography as a diagnostic tool in dementia. 906 24
Clinical features, magnetic resonance imaging and visual evoked potentials were analysed and correlated in 20 Finnish patients with muscle-eye-brain disease. Significantly enhanced visual evoked potentials were found in 15 patients (giant in 14 of them). Magnetic resonance images were available in 17 cases. The images of 12 patients with giant visual evoked potentials showed typical brain malformation pachygyria with a nodular cortical surface i.e. cobblestone cortex, midline defect and hypoplastic pons but no significant abnormalities in the grey-white matter. One male had typical structural changes but flat visual evoked potentials. His extreme
hydrocephalus
with optic nerve compression may explain the findings. No structural changes on magnetic resonance images were found in the remaining four patients; however, in two of them marked alterations in the white matter were found. Three of these patients showed normal and one flat visual evoked potentials. Only one patient with giant visual evoked potentials and typical structural findings on magnetic resonance imaging had changes in a large area in the white matter (several attacks of
status epilepticus
might have caused the alterations in the white matter). Thus, the combination of giant visual evoked potentials and typical structural changes on magnetic resonance imaging with normal intensities of white matter and deep grey matter seems to be a good marker for patients with muscle-eye-brain disease.
...
PMID:Muscle-eye-brain disease: clinical features, visual evoked potentials and brain imaging in 20 patients. 1072 45
Neuroemergencies are life-threatening situations in which, whatever the cause, common pathologic phenomena result in secondary brain lesions. The goal of critical care management is to stop these self-aggravating processes as soon as possible. Initial resuscitation is devoted to control of the airway and hemodynamic and hydroelectrolytic stabilization. With mass lesions, minimal computed tomographic exploration immediately precedes surgical decompression. Further critical care adapted to the child's needs requires multimodal monitoring. Normoventilation, deep sedation, osmotherapy with mannitol or hypertonic saline solutions, and optimization of mean arterial pressure are the basis of management. A purely pressure-driven approach aimed at controlling cerebral perfusion pressure could be potentially harmful, and associated measurement of blood flow velocity with transcranial Doppler and jugular bulb oxygen saturation monitoring allows an approach to cerebral blood flow and metabolism. Outcome can be improved in dangerous situations such as severe brain injuries, cerebral arteriovenous malformation rupture,
status epilepticus
, and acute
hydrocephalus
, provided that emergency management could be applied efficiently.
...
PMID:Pediatric neurologic emergencies. 1137 15
Haemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH) is characterized anatomically by an infiltration of multiple tissues with lymphocytes and haemophagocytic histiocytes. First symptoms are usually hepatosplenomegaly, pancytopenia, and intractable fever. Up to 73% of those with HLH develop CNS involvement during the disease course. The peculiarity of the two patients presented here, a 20-month-old Italian female and a 4-year-old Moroccan female, is that the initial presenting neurological symptoms mimicked an encephalitis, anticipating the typical systemic symptoms by 1 and 4 months. They developed progressive encephalopathy accompanied by
status epilepticus
, one child developed a secondary
hydrocephalus
. In both children it was not possible to detect an underlying infection or malignant disease and there were no other cases in the family that suggested a familial form of HLH. Diagnosis and initiation of treatment was delayed because of the initial encephalopathic clinical picture and the late onset of the typical systemic features. As early diagnosis allows better therapeutical approaches, haemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis should be considered in children with persistent or progressive findings of encephalopathy, especially in the absence of identification of a plausible pathogen.
...
PMID:Acute encephalopathy as a primary manifestation of haemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis. 1150 22
We describe a 3 year-old male who presented with fever and cerebellar dysfunction after varicella. He developed transient hepatosplenomegaly, cytopenias, and progressive central nervous system involvement (coma,
status epilepticus
, and
hydrocephalus
). Despite normal initial cranial computed tomographic scan, diffuse swelling of the cerebellum with downward tonsillar herniation ensued. Diagnosis of hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis was difficult and delayed because of the relapsing course, and complete diagnostic criteria were not fulfilled at initial presentation. Central nervous system disease preceded the typical clinical picture of this disease; it dominated the clinical course and caused life-threatening complications and sequelae. The patient improved after treatment, according to the hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis protocol (HLH-94) of the Histiocyte Society, with dexamethasone, etoposide, and cyclosporine and unrelated cord blood stem cell transplantation. A mutation in the perforin gene confirmed the diagnosis of familial hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis.
...
PMID:Near fatal cerebellar swelling in familial hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis. 1516 42
Neurocysticercosis is the most common parasitic infestation involving the central nervous system in tropical countries. Common presentations are seizure, meningitis and increased intracranial pressure. The authors report a case of a 52-year-old woman with racemose neurocysticercosis in the subarachnoid space at the cistern of the brain through the lumbar cistern. She presented with progressive paraparesis due to spinal cord compression and finally had progressive bilateral sensori-neural hearing loss. MRI brain and the whole spinal cord revealed numerous rim-enhancing cystic lesions at the basal cistern, prepontine cistern, bilateral cerebellopontine angle, internal acoustic canals, intramedullary lesion at the 5th cervical spinal level, lumbar cistern lesions and secondary syringomyelia at the thoracic spinal cord. The histopathologic examination confirmed cysticercosis. After treatment by albendazole and surgical removal, she still developed recurrent spinal compression at a higher level and obstructive
hydrocephalus
. Finally, she died from
status epilepticus
and septic shock.
...
PMID:Spinal cord compression and bilateral sensory neural hearing loss: an unusual manifestation of neurocysticercosis. 1556 Jul 5
Two patients, a 35-year-old woman and a 60-year-old man, developed severe neurological side effects during treatment with phenytoin: disorientation, myoclonia, hallucinations and drowsiness in the first patient and a comatose state in the second. The woman had spina bifida, a ventriculoperitoneal drain because of
hydrocephalus
, recurrent urinary-tract infection, and a history of
status epilepticus
. The man suffered from diabetic ketoacidosis complicated by epileptic convulsions. In both patients, the total phenytoin concentration in the blood was within the therapeutic range of 8-20 mg/l. However, both had low serum albumin concentrations, below 25 g/l. Low serum albumin levels are associated with increased concentrations of the free fraction of phenytoin. Toxic levels of free phenytoin were found: 4 and 8 mg/l, respectively, while the therapeutic range is 0.5-2 mg/l. The first patient recovered after treatment with phenytoin was stopped, after which she was placed on a lower dosage; the second patient died. When prescribing phenytoin to patients with hypoalbuminaemia, one should be aware of the risk of intoxication due to a high level of free phenytoin and consequently an increased risk of severe neurological side effects.
...
PMID:[Severe phenytoin intoxication in patients with hypoalbuminaemia]. 1752 Aug 54
Spontaneous intracranial haemorrhage during pregnancy, which is usually subarachnoid or intraparenchymal in nature, causes significant maternal and foetal morbidity and mortality. Solitary intraventricular haemorrhage (IVH) in pregnancy has never been previously reported nor has the use of intraventricular fibrinolysis in this situation. A 28-year-old woman presented at 20 weeks' gestation with
status epilepticus
from spontaneous severe IVH. Angiography and magnetic resonance imaging did not show the presence of a vascular lesion or aneurysm. Thrombolytic treatment with intraventricular injection of recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (rt-PA) was instituted. Although the foetus aborted spontaneously 6 weeks after the haemorrhage and a ventriculo-peritoneal shunt for
hydrocephalus
was eventually required, the mother recovered to the level of mild disability at 3 months. Intraventricular fibrinolysis with rt-PA seems to be an effective form of treatment for IVH in pregnancy.
...
PMID:Intraventricular recombinant tissue plasminogen activator for treatment of spontaneous intraventricular haemorrhage in pregnancy. 1863 41
Hippocampal sclerosis is a common pathological finding in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy, including children, but a causal relationship to early-life seizures remains in question. Neonatal
status epilepticus
in animals can result in neuronal death within the hippocampus, although macroscopic features of hippocampal shrinkage are not evident at adulthood. Here, we examined electrophysiological and pathological consequences of focally evoked
status epilepticus
triggered by intra-amygdala microinjection of kainic acid in postnatal day 10 rat pups. Neonatal
status epilepticus
resulted in extensive neuronal death in the ipsilateral hippocampal CA1 and CA3 subfields and hilus, as assessed by DNA fragmentation and Fluoro-Jade B staining 72 hours later. The contralateral hippocampus was not significantly damaged. Histopathology at P55/P65 revealed unilateral hippocampal sclerosis (grade IV, modified Wyler/Watson scale) comprising >50% CA1 and CA3 neuron loss and astrogliosis. Additional features included
hydrocephalus
ex vacuo, modest dentate granule cell layer widening, and altered neuropeptide Y immunoreactivity indicative of synaptic rearrangement. Hippocampal atrophy was also evident on magnetic resonance imaging. Depth electrode recordings at adulthood detected spontaneous seizures that involved the ipsilateral hippocampus and amygdala. A significant positive correlation was found between hippocampal pathology grade and both frequency and duration of epileptic seizures at adulthood. The current study demonstrates that experimental neonatal
status epilepticus
can result in classical unilateral hippocampal sclerosis and temporal lobe epilepsy.
...
PMID:Experimental neonatal status epilepticus and the development of temporal lobe epilepsy with unilateral hippocampal sclerosis. 1994 25
Little to no pediatric or neurosurgical literature has been published about the complications of ventriculoperitoneal shunt procedures for
hydrocephalus
associated with vein of Galen malformations in childhood. The interventional neuroradiology literature, however, suggests that ventriculoperitoneal shunting as first-line treatment for
hydrocephalus
in children with vein of Galen malformations is fraught with short- and long-term dangers, including
status epilepticus
, intraventricular hemorrhage, subdural hematoma and hygroma, venous infarction, malignant dystrophic calcification, and worsening developmental delay. We present a single pediatric case where a ventriculoperitoneal shunt procedure for symptomatic
hydrocephalus
seemed to be the major contributing factor to the rapid neurological deterioration and eventual death of an infant with a vein of Galen malformation. Based on this experience and our review of the literature, we suggest the use of endovascular embolization of the vein of Galen malformation to reestablish a balance in hydrovenous dynamics as first-line treatment rather than directly addressing
hydrocephalus
with CSF diversion. The ventriculoperitoneal shunt procedure should be reserved for cases with symptomatic
hydrocephalus
in which the patient is a poor candidate for embolization, or for cases where endovascular therapy has already been maximized. The role of endoscopy in the treatment of
hydrocephalus
associated with vein of Galen malformations is not clear.
...
PMID:The high risks of ventriculoperitoneal shunt procedures for hydrocephalus associated with vein of Galen malformations in childhood: case report and literature review. 2066 4
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