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Query: UMLS:C0038220 (
status epilepticus
)
7,272
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Large doses of phenytoin were administered on 159 occasions to 139 adult patients. Most patients had had more than three seizures or were in
status epilepticus
. Based on response to treatment, patients could be divided into two groups. Those with excellent response (recurrent seizures, 10%; mortality, 1%) included known epileptics with exacerbation of seizures (n = 75), atypical alcohol withdrawal (6), or miscellaneous conditions (17). Those with poor results (recurrent seizures, 57% mortality, 38%) included patients with anoxic or metabolic encephalopathy (14), stroke or other
vascular disease
(14), brain tumor (5), or trauma (5).
...
PMID:Intravenous phenytoin in acute treatment of seizures. 57
The present study, conducted between January 1975 and June 1983, includes 282 adult patients admitted for
status epilepticus
(SE) in 2 intensive care units (3.5% of all admissions). In their great majority, i.e., 201, patients had no previous history of epilepsy, and initiated the SE during the course of recent affections such as brain or systemic diseases. In 81 patients with previous seizure, epilepsy was idiopathic in 20, and symptomatic in 61, the 3 main causes being cranial traumatism, cerebrovascular accident and chronic alcoholism. SE was of various causes. The most frequent were cerebro-
vascular disease
, post-anoxic encephalopathy, intoxication, bacterial or viral meningo-encephalitis. In some patients, SE was preceded by manifestations such as convulsions, behavorial disturbances or conscience impairment. One should be aware of these facts and undertake or increase an anticonvulsivant medication at their onset. Duration of SE, when clearly established, was highly variable but had no apparent correlation to sequelae or death occurrences. SE itself was directly related to death in only 2 cases; in all other instances death was the consequence of the primary disease. These results are consistent with previous reports: presently SE occurs more frequently in the course of other affections than in prior epileptic patients. The better vital prognosis of SE is due to the simultaneous conjunction of new anticonvulsivant medication and supportive care associated with the cure of the causative disease.
...
PMID:[Status epilepticus in the adult. Epidemiologic and clinical study in an intensive care unit]. 402 53
Nonconvulsive status epilepticus (NCSE) accounts for approximately 20% of all
status epilepticus
(SE). Although convulsive SE is recognized as a medical emergency, prompt diagnosis and treatment of patients with NCSE is often not emphasized because its consequences are thought to be benign. We report 10 patients with persistent neurologic deficits or death after well-documented NCSE in the form of complex partial
status epilepticus
(CPSE). All patients had prolonged CPSE lasting 36 hours or longer, as documented by clinical and EEG findings. Causes for CPSE were preexisting epilepsy with partial and secondarily generalized seizures (3 patients),
vascular disease
(2 patients), encephalitis (2 patients), and metabolic disease (1 patient); causes were unknown for two patients. Poor outcomes identified included persistent (lasting at least 3 months) or permanent cognitive or memory loss (5 patients), cognitive or memory loss plus motor and sensory dysfunction (3 patients), and death (3 patients). NCSE in the form of CPSE is not a benign entity. Serious morbidity and mortality may occur due to the adverse effects of prolonged seizures and as a result of acute brain disorders that precipitate the seizures.
...
PMID:Complex partial status epilepticus accompanied by serious morbidity and mortality. 910 27
Five patients (4 women, 1 man) presented with an acute confusional episode for the first time between the ages of 53 and 76. Their EEGs showed generalized paroxysmal activity indicating a diagnosis of nonconvulsive generalized
status epilepticus
(absence status). Two patients had tonic-clonic seizures just before the onset of the status, but none had a history of chronic epilepsy. Three patients had long-standing psychiatric disorders. Treatment with psychotropic drugs and medical illness (
vascular disease
, metabolic derangement) may have acted as precipitating factors for the
status epilepticus
in all patients. The diagnosis was never made on admission, since psychiatric history and ictal behavioral manifestations often raised intriguing problems of differential diagnosis. In all cases, only icta; EEG could provide a correct diagnostic assessment.
...
PMID:Nonconvulsive status epilepticus as a cause of confusion in later life: a report of 5 cases. 780 Jan 62
Using univariate and multivariate regression analysis, we studied seizure duration, seizure type, age, etiologies, other clinical features, and mortality among 253 adults with
status epilepticus
(SE) admitted to the Medical College of Virginia. Cerebral
vascular disease
and discontinuation of antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) were the most prominent causes of SE, each accounting for approximately 22% of all patients in the series. The other principle etiologies were alcohol withdrawal, idiopathic, anoxia, metabolic disorders, hemorrhage, infection, tumor, drug overdose, and trauma. When the patients were divided into two groups, the group with SE lasting < 1 h had a lower mortality as compared with seizure duration > or = 1 h. Low mortality rates were noted in alcohol and AED discontinuation etiologies. Anoxia and increasing age were significantly correlated with higher mortality. The mortality rates of partial and generalized SE were not significantly different. Race and sex did not affect mortality significantly. Our findings represent the first multivariate analysis of predictive indicators of mortality in SE and demonstrate that specific factors influence mortality rate in SE.
...
PMID:Determinants of mortality in status epilepticus. 811 54
Establishing the incidence and frequency of
status epilepticus
(SE) is difficult because of differences in definition, problems of diagnosing nonconvulsive SE and, above all, the diversity of study populations. There are differences involved in studying the frequency of SE in a population of epileptics, in a sample of all patients seen at a single hospital or by a specific department, or in the general population. It is estimated that SE is suffered annually by 50 out of 100,000 inhabitants in the general population, 0.2% of hospital patients, 3.5% of patients admitted to an intensive care unit, and from 2 to 10% of epileptic patients. These figures increase if only children are considered. Age and history of epilepsy must be taken into account in order to determine the cause of SE. SE often appears in a context of no known prior history of epilepsy, particularly in the elderly. The cause remains undetected in approximately one third of SE cases. Among the most common symptomatic causes in the adult are cerebral
vascular disease
and toxic-metabolic disorders.
...
PMID:[Epidemiology and etiology of status epilepticus]. 947 Apr 32
Status epilepticus
(SE) is not rare in critically ill intensive care unit (ICU) patients, but its diagnosis is often delayed or missed, in part because it is mistaken for other causes of altered mental status. Even once diagnosed, SE in the ICU can be refractory to treatment. We sought to determine the causes, clinical features, and difficulties in diagnosis of SE in the ICU, and the effects of antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) on its course. We reviewed the course of ICU patients with both clinical and EEG evidence of SE, attempting to determine which patients are at risk for unsuspected SE, what was the typical delay in diagnosis, and whether AED treatment made a difference in their clinical courses. By clinical and EEG evidence, 91 ICU patients with SE were identified, all with abnormal mental status: 74 were comatose.
Vascular disease
(in 24) and anoxia (22) were the most common causes; most had multiple medical problems. Although 76 patients had clinically evident seizures earlier (and 56, clinical SE) only 20 were thought to be in SE at the time of the diagnostic EEG. There was a median delay of 48 hours from clinical deterioration until diagnosis in patients with earlier clinical seizures and 72 hours without seizures. Among the 68 nonanoxic patients treated with AEDs, 38 (56%) seemed to improve in alertness, including 25 who were comatose. Although patients who were stuporous or confused (vs. comatose) improved more often on AEDs, they were less often realized to be in SE before the EEG. Patients with earlier seizures were also more likely to improve, but no more likely to be diagnosed before the EEG. Patients who responded to AEDs were more likely to survive. ICU patients with altered mental status and EEG evidence of SE often have severe medical and surgical illnesses, refractory SE, and a high mortality. The delay to diagnosis is substantial, but a significant subset of patients improves on AEDs once SE is discovered. This diagnosis should be sought more often in ICU patients with abnormal mental status, especially after clinical seizures or SE without full recovery.
...
PMID:Detection and treatment of refractory status epilepticus in the intensive care unit. 1867 81
Little is known on coma in neurological intensive care unit (NICU) in the setting of developing country in Sub-Saharan Africa. The aim of this study was to determine the morbi-mortality and survival of coma in the NICU of Dakar, Senegal. We carried out a prospective longitudinal study in the NICU of the teaching hospital of Fann in Dakar during a period of 15 months (with 12 months of inclusion) on comatose patients. Were included all patients presenting with a Glasgow score inferior to 9. Standard biological analyses were prescribed for each patient while CT scan was performed if indicated. Daily evaluation was done and complications recorded. Each patient was followed for at least 3 months. Survival was determined by the Kaplan Meier method. 345 patients were admitted in the NICU and 169 were included (48,99 %). The mean age of the patients was 58.04 +/- 17.55 years with a sex ration of 0.92. The mean time from installation of disorders and initial consultation was 47.30 +/- 138.34 hours. Etiologies were
vascular disease
(71 %),
status epilepticus
(9.47 %), meningoencephalitis (8.88 %) and metabolic disorders (8.88 %). The mean duration of hospitalization was 8.89 +/- 9.53 days associated with a mortality rate of 82.25 % for the same period. Survival at day 90 was 10.65 %. Mortality was related to infectious condition (28.4 %), renal failure (14.78 %), cardiovascular failure (13.61 %), cerebral engagement (12.43 %), multivisceral failure (11.24 %), pulmonary embolism (1.18 %) and unknown cause (18.34 %). In conclusion, coma is associated with a high mortality rate in our context and suggests that early consultation, a good control of vascular risk factors and better management of infectious condition should reduce this impact.
...
PMID:[A prospective longitudinal study of coma in the intensive care unit in an African setting: case of Dakar, Senegal]. 1964 87
Cerebral microbleeds (CMBs) are commonly found in patients with stroke and cerebral amyloid
angiopathy
. However, there have been no reports of CMBs or their acute appearance in patients with
status epilepticus
. Herein we describe two patients with refractory
status epilepticus
of uncertain origin. Both patients were previously healthy, and their initial imaging showed no underlying CMBs. One patient's follow-up susceptibility-weighted imaging 29 days after initial imaging showed 63 new CMBs. The other patient's follow-up susceptibility-weighted imaging 41 days after initial imaging showed 14 new CMBs. Multimodal neuromonitoring revealed increase in lactate-pyruvate ratio, decrease in partial brain tissue oxygen tension, increase in pressure reactivity index, and fluctuations of blood pressure and cerebral perfusion pressure. This report demonstrates that multiple new CMBs may develop in patients with refractory
status epilepticus
(SE).
...
PMID:Acute cerebral microbleeds in refractory status epilepticus. 2339 70
This report discusses a case of nonconvulsive
status epilepticus
, caused by cerebral amyloid
angiopathy
-related inflammation. Brain biopsy demonstrated cerebral amyloid
angiopathy
, with clinical and radiographic features indicative of a fluctuating inflammatory process. Immunomodulatory treatment with pulse steroids resulted in rapid and dramatic clinical and radiographic improvement. Cerebral amyloid angiopathy-related inflammation should be considered in the differential diagnosis of new-onset seizures after the age of 40, when associated with fluctuating multifocal T2 hyperintensities and petechial hemorrhages on gradient echo (GRE) or susceptibility-weighted (SWI) MRI sequences.
...
PMID:Status epilepticus caused by cerebral amyloid angiopathy-related inflammation. 2740 4
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