Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0038220 (status epilepticus)
7,272 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Postictal psychoses are brief psychotic episodes that usually occur after poorly controlled partial complex seizure clusters. The psychosis commonly appears following a lucid interval, ranging from a few hours to days after seizure termination. An underlying structural brain abnormality is common and usually involves the temporal lobe. Postictal psychosis, while well known in adults, has not been described previously in children. We describe a 9-year-old boy with right hemiparesis due to a neonatal stroke, who developed a postictal schizophrenia-like psychosis following status epilepticus. Electroencephalography showed left-sided slowing. A brain computed tomographic scan and magnetic resonance imaging revealed left hemisphere hypoplasia. A 99mTc-ECD single photon emission computed tomographic scan of the brain revealed decreased left-hemisphere perfusion, most pronounced to the medial temporal lobe. The psychosis resolved gradually over 7 days without antipsychotic therapy. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first description of postictal psychosis in a child.
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PMID:Postictal psychosis in a child. 1061 70

Glutamate is the principal excitatory neurotransmitter in brain. Our knowledge of the glutamatergic synapse has advanced enormously in the last 10 years, primarily through application of molecular biological techniques to the study of glutamate receptors and transporters. There are three families of ionotropic receptors with intrinsic cation permeable channels [N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA), alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA) and kainate]. There are three groups of metabotropic, G protein-coupled glutamate receptors (mGluR) that modify neuronal and glial excitability through G protein subunits acting on membrane ion channels and second messengers such as diacylglycerol and cAMP. There are also two glial glutamate transporters and three neuronal transporters in the brain. Glutamate is the most abundant amino acid in the diet. There is no evidence for brain damage in humans resulting from dietary glutamate. A kainate analog, domoate, is sometimes ingested accidentally in blue mussels; this potent toxin causes limbic seizures, which can lead to hippocampal and related pathology and amnesia. Endogenous glutamate, by activating NMDA, AMPA or mGluR1 receptors, may contribute to the brain damage occurring acutely after status epilepticus, cerebral ischemia or traumatic brain injury. It may also contribute to chronic neurodegeneration in such disorders as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and Huntington's chorea. In animal models of cerebral ischemia and traumatic brain injury, NMDA and AMPA receptor antagonists protect against acute brain damage and delayed behavioral deficits. Such compounds are undergoing testing in humans, but therapeutic efficacy has yet to be established. Other clinical conditions that may respond to drugs acting on glutamatergic transmission include epilepsy, amnesia, anxiety, hyperalgesia and psychosis.
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PMID:Glutamate as a neurotransmitter in the brain: review of physiology and pathology. 1073 72

The induction of a delirium by medical illness, somatic treatments, or experimental drugs occasionally relieves psychotic, excited, and manic states. An induced delirium is a feature of modern electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), and was a feature of insulin coma therapy and psychosurgery. Case material explores the relationship between psychosis, mania, seizures, and electroencephalogram. From our understanding of the mechanism of ECT in relieving intractable status epilepticus, we suggest a hypothesis for the beneficial interaction between delirium and ECT.
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PMID:The interaction of delirium and seizures. 1083 98

Encephalopathy with electrical status epilepticus during sleep or ESES is an age-dependent and self-limited syndrome whose distinctive features include a characteristic age of onset (with a peak around 4-5 years), heterogeneous seizures types (mostly partial motor or unilateral seizures during sleep and absences or falls while awake), a typical EEG pattern (with continuous and diffuse paroxysms occupying at least 85% of slow wave sleep) and a variable neuropsychological regression consisting of IQ decrease, reduction of language (as in acquired aphasia or Landau-Kleffner syndrome), disturbance of behaviour (psychotic states) and motor impairment (in the form of ataxia, dyspraxia, dystonia or unilateral deficit). Despite the long-term favourable outcome of epilepsy and status epilepticus during sleep (SES), the prognosis is guarded because of the persistence of severe neuropsychological and/or motor deficits in approximately half of the patients. No specific treatment has been advocated for this syndrome, but valproate sodium, benzodiazepines and ACTH have been shown to control the seizures and the SES pattern in many cases, although often only temporarily. Subpial transection is proposed in some instances as in non-regressive acquired aphasia. Recent data support the concept that ESES syndrome may include a large subset of developmental or acquired regressive conditions of infancy.
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PMID:Encephalopathy with electrical status epilepticus during slow sleep or ESES syndrome including the acquired aphasia. 1099 61

We report on a case of a 45-year-old man in an episode of major depression with psychotic features treated with bilateral electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). At the eighth treatment, he manifested unilateral, prolonged, nonconvulsive seizure activity on the left side, which lasted 351 seconds longer than seizure activity on the right, and was terminated with intravenous diazepam. This is the first report of a unilateral prolonged seizure. Its occurrence following bilateral ECT was particularly noteworthy. This case also highlights the importance of two-channel EEG recording during ECT. Without two recording channels we doubt that this event would have been detected, perhaps resulting in nonconvulsive status epilepticus.
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PMID:A unilateral, prolonged, nonconvulsive seizure in a patient treated with bilateral ECT. 1173 33

Tiagabine (TGB) is now registered in >20 countries, and the total number of treated patients approaches 90,000. Short-term safety data were derived mainly from five placebo-controlled, add-on studies in adults with therapy-resistant partial epilepsy, and two conversion to TGB monotherapy studies. Central nervous system (CNS)-related adverse effects, most frequently dizziness, were common with TGB treatment during the titration period; the risk became similar to placebo rates during fixed-dose periods. Other adverse events that were more frequent in TGB- than in placebo-treated patients were asthenia, nervousness, tremor, concentration difficulties, depressive mood, and language problems. TGB doses should be titrated slowly and taken with food to avoid rapid increases in plasma concentrations, thus minimizing the risks of adverse events. Overall, >2,500 patients have been exposed to TGB during clinical trials, with 1,274 patients treated >12 months, the majority of whom received TGB 24-60 mg/day. No idiosyncratic reactions have been linked to the use of TGB, and no abnormalities in hematology or common chemistry values were reported. In all the epilepsy studies combined, 21% of patients discontinued treatment because of adverse events, usually during the first 6 months of treatment. No adverse effects on cognitive abilities were detected when the neuropsychological effects of TGB add-on therapy and monotherapy were evaluated. TGB does not appear to cause an excess risk of psychosis or increase the incidence of status epilepticus or spike/wave discharges. No evidence of a relationship between visual field constriction and TGB treatment was found in a study of 15 patients converted to TGB monotherapy (mean dose, 22 mg/day; mean duration, 2.5 years) who had a full ophthalmologic evaluation. In conclusion, the characteristics of TGB in the management of partial epilepsy are enhanced by its favorable side-effect profile in the cognitive area.
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PMID:Long-term safety of tiagabine. 1152 Mar 23

Confusion in an epileptic patient raises several diagnostic possibilities: non convulsive status epilepticus, interictal or post-ictal psychosis, drug-induced confusion, confusion of another nature. Accurate diagnosis is based on clinical analysis, systematically completed by the practice and the repetition of emergency EEG.
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PMID:[Confusional disorders and epilepsy]. 1199 48

To examine clinical features of cases of death among epilepsy patients as a case-control study, with special attention to suicide, we analyzed the records of 43 deceased patients with well-classified epilepsy. The subjects were compared with 1,722 control patients who showed definite subtypes of epilepsy. As a result, among the major causes of death, 13 of the subjects suffered accidents (mostly drowning), ten experienced sudden unexpected death, seven had status epilepticus, and six committed suicide. There were no significant differences with regard to clinical variables except for psychotic episodes, which were more frequently encountered in subjects than in controls (chi(2)=6.771, P=0.009, Yates' modification). Statistically significant differences were found by epilepsy type as well (chi(2)=14.72, P=0.002), with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) proving to be most closely associated with death among the epilepsy patients. Further, suicide was only encountered in patients with TLE and the association was statistically significant (chi(2)=5.119, P=0.024). Half of those who committed suicide (n=3), did so by jumping in front of an oncoming train while in the midst of an episode of postictal psychosis. In conclusion, most cases of suicide in patients with epilepsy were found to be the result of an immediate causal relationship with ictal or interictal epileptic manifestations, rather than a result of augmentation of psychosocial stressors generated by a long-standing handicap derived from the severe illness.
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PMID:Death in epilepsy with special attention to suicide cases. 1239 73

Non convulsive status epilepticus is a heterogeneous condition consisting of very different electroclinical syndromes. It is difficult to make the diagnosis and identify common factors among patients. We report two cases with an unusual presentation. A 31 years old woman having discoid lupus presented with a prolonged exogenous psychosis that lasted two and half months, associated to echolalia. After the episode the patient remained with a severe frontal syndrome that could be the consequence of a non convulsive status epilepticus. A 60 years old woman with an epilepsy diagnosed at the age of 30, presented with recurrent episodes of aphasia. During one of these crises, the electroencephalogram showed continuous epileptiform activity.
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PMID:[Non convulsive status epilepticus: an heterogeneous disease with a difficult diagnosis. Report of 2 cases with unusual presentation]. 1463 93

There is an increased incidence of schizophrenia-like psychosis in temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE), and several risk factors have been implicated, including the duration of epilepsy and temporal lobe neuropathology. To investigate the biological mechanism of epileptic psychosis, we examined alterations of central dopaminergic systems in the kainate model of TLE. In adult rats, kainate was microinjected into the left amygdala to induce status epilepticus. An indirect dopamine agonist methamphetamine (MAP, 2 mg/kg, i.p.) was administered before and 1 month after the kainate treatment. MAP-induced locomotor activity was significantly enhanced in the kainate group compared with the baseline (pre-kainate) level, which was antagonized by pretreatment with haloperidol. The enhancement of locomotor activity in the kainate group was significantly correlated with the density of hippocampal CA1 neurons. Although the basal extracellular dopamine concentration was significantly lower in the striatum in the kainate group than in the control group (5.5 vs 39.2 fmol/20-min sample), the maximal concentration following MAP administration did not differ between the two groups. These results clearly demonstrate that hypersensitivity of the dopamine systems develops in the chronic phase of the kainate-induced TLE model, which may be responsible for the mechanism of epileptic psychosis.
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PMID:Enhancement of central dopaminergic activity in the kainate model of temporal lobe epilepsy: implication for the mechanism of epileptic psychosis. 1503 65


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