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

Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) has been used as a potential therapeutic tool in various neurological and psychiatric diseases including depression, Parkinson disease, spinocerebellar degeneration, epilepsy, urinary incontinence, movement disorders, chronic pain, migraine and chronic tinnitus, etc. Several reports showed the therapeutic effects of rTMS as a treatment of depression and Parkinson disease (PD), whereas others found no significant effects. It is by now not yet fully understood whether rTMS has a therapeutic effect on those diseases. The controversy arises from the differences of the stimulation parameters and evaluation methods of the effects in those studies. The Japanese multi-center, double blinded, sham stimulation controlled trial in 85 patients with PD showed an efficacy in both the rTMS-treated and sham stimulated patients. This result does not prove the efficacy of the rTMS in PD; on the other hand, it does not rule out the efficacy. Possible mechanism of favorable effects of rTMS is related to increasing the release of dopamine in the mesolimbic and mesostriatal system. The other Japanese multi-center, double blinded, sham stimulation controlled trial in 99 patients with spinocerebellar degeneration revealed significant therapeutic effects of rTMS in 51 patients with SCA6. We studied the effects of rTMS on seizure susceptibility in rats which prevented the development of status epilepticus of pentylenetetrazol-induced convulsions. This finding suggests the possibility of therapeutic use of rTMS in epilepsy. Further studies should be performed aiming to reveal the optimal stimulation parameters, and are necessary to reveal the therapeutic role of the rTMS in neurological and psychiatric diseases.
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PMID:[Clinical applications of transcranial magnetic stimulation for the treatment of various neurological diseases]. 1644 38

We report the history of a 14-year-old girl with atypical childhood occipital epilepsy "Gastaut type" whose first generalized tonic-clonic seizure was preceded by migraine without aura and followed by a status migrainosus. This status lasted for 3 days despite standard analgesic therapy. An EEG recording revealed an occipital status epilepticus during her migraine complaints. Seven minutes after intravenous administration of 10 mg diazepam under continuous EEG recording, a suppression of the epileptiform discharges over the right occipital was seen, while the headache subsided 3 min later. After precise questioning about the circumstances that possibly could have led to these events, it appeared that she had played for hours with a play station on the new color TV and she had visited an exhibition of Matisse and Bonnard with bright colors and contrast-rich text. Standardized extensive intermittent photic stimulation (IPS), 2 days after the status migrainosus, evoked besides asymmetrical right-sided driving, green spots in her left visual field, while in the EEG sharp waves were recorded over the right parietotemporal region. After further IPS with 20 Hz (eye closure), she started complaining of a light pulsating headache right occipitally and in the EEG right parietotemporal sharp-waves were seen. This lasted for about 10 min. Later, an interictal routine EEG was normal except for some theta over the right temporooccipital area. The most likely diagnosis is an atypical form of occipital epilepsy "Gastaut type." We would therefore advocate recording EEGs with photic stimulation in patients with atypical migraneous features.
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PMID:A case with atypical childhood occipital epilepsy "Gastaut type": an ictal migraine manifestation with a good response to intravenous diazepam. 1771 60

Levetiracetam (LEV) is a broad-spectrum antiepileptic drug that is effective against a variety of seizure types. It is a pyrridoline derivative with a very favourable pharmacokinetic profile: excellent bioavailability, linear kinetics, minimal plasma protein binding and quick achievement of steady state concentrations. It is not metabolized through the P450 hepatic cytochrome system, does not induce its own metabolism and has no clinically relevant drug-drug interactions. It is available as film-coated tablets, liquid formulation for oral ingestion and intravenous concentrated solution. Controlled and open-label studies have shown its efficacy and safety as initial monotherapy and add-on treatment for partial-onset seizures in children and adults, and also as add-on therapy in refractory partial and primary generalized seizures. Its rapid onset of action, lack of drug-drug interactions and availability as an intravenous solution make it an optimal drug to treat epilepsy associated with other medical conditions. Preliminary reports also suggest potential efficacy in refractory status epilepticus, although this is not a registered indication. Levetiracetam is generally well tolerated, and no serious idiosyncratic side effects have been reported so far. Behavioral side effects (hostility up to aggressive behaviour) are not uncommon. Small, uncontrolled studies have suggested potential therapeutic potential in difficult-to-treat dyskinesias in Parkinson's disease, tremors of different etiologies, migraine prophylaxis and mood disorders. This needs to be confirmed in larger, controlled studies.
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PMID:Levetiracetam. 1817 64

The relationship between epilepsy and migraine is complex and remains to be determined. We report 3 cases that address 2 questions on this topic. The first and second cases showed an association between migraine without aura and the onset of epileptic seizures. The third case report describes a patient in whom migraine with aura occurred and was followed by the development of status epilepticus, which occurred 2 or 3 hours after the attack of migraine with aura. We discuss the present definition of migralepsy and reassess its definition by suggesting possible extensions to its current definition.
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PMID:Migralepsy: is the current definition too narrow? 1870 28

A big advance in epileptology has been the recognition of syndromes with distinct aetiology, clinical and EEG features, treatment and prognosis. A prime and common example of this is rolandic epilepsy that is well known by the general paediatricians for over 50 years, thus allowing a precise diagnosis that predicts an excellent prognosis. However, rolandic is not the only benign childhood epileptic syndrome. Converging evidence from multiple and independent clinical, EEG and magnetoencephalographic studies has documented Panayiotopoulos syndrome (PS) as a model of childhood autonomic epilepsy, which is also common and benign. Despite high prevalence, lengthy and dramatic features, PS as well as autonomic status epilepticus had eluded recognition because emetic and other ictal autonomic manifestations were dismissed as non-epileptic events of other diseases. Furthermore, PS because of frequent EEG occipital spikes has been erroneously considered as occipital epilepsy and thus confused with the idiopathic childhood occipital epilepsy of Gastaut (ICOE-G), which is another age-related but rarer and of unpredictable prognosis syndrome. Encephalitis is a common misdiagnosis for PS and migraine with visual aura for ICOE-G. Pathophysiologically, the symptomatogenic zone appears to correspond to the epileptogenic zone in rolandic epilepsy (sensory-motor symptomatology of the rolandic cortex) and the ICOE-G (occipital lobe symptomatology), while the autonomic clinical manifestations of PS are likely to be generated by variable and widely spread epileptogenic foci acting upon a temporarily hyperexcitable central autonomic network. Rolandic epilepsy, PS, ICOE-G and other possible clinical phenotypes of benign childhood focal seizures are likely to be linked together by a genetically determined, functional derangement of the systemic brain maturation that is age related (benign childhood seizure susceptibility syndrome). This is usually mild but exceptionally it may diverge to serious epileptic disorders such as epileptic encephalopathy with continuous spike and wave during sleep. Links with other benign and age-related seizures in early life such as febrile seizures, benign focal neonatal and infantile seizures is possible. Overlap with idiopathic generalized epilepsies is limited and of uncertain genetic significance. Taking all these into account, benign childhood focal seizures and related epileptic syndromes would need proper multi-disciplinary re-assessment in an evidence-based manner.
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PMID:Benign childhood focal epilepsies: assessment of established and newly recognized syndromes. 1871 67

The C10orf2 gene encodes the mitochondrial DNA helicase Twinkle, which is one of the proteins important for mitochondrial DNA maintenance. Dominant mutations cause multiple mitochondrial DNA deletions and progressive external ophthalmoplegia, but recent findings associate recessive mutations with mitochondrial DNA depletion and encephalopathy or hepatoencephalopathy. The latter clinical phenotypes resemble those associated with recessive POLG1 mutations. We have previously described patients with infantile onset spinocerebellar ataxia (MIM271245) caused either by homozygous (Y508C) or compound heterozygous (Y508C and A318T) Twinkle mutations. Our earlier reports focused on the spinocerebellar degeneration, but the 20-year follow-up of 23 patients has shown that refractory status epilepticus, migraine-like headaches and severe psychiatric symptoms are also pathognomonic for the disease. All adolescent patients have experienced phases of severe migraine, and seven patients had antipsychotic medication. Epilepsia partialis continua occurred in 15 patients leading to generalized epileptic statuses in 13 of them. Eight of these patients have died. Valproate treatment was initiated on two patients, but had to be discontinued because of a severe elevation of liver enzymes. The patients recovered, and we have not used valproate in infantile onset spinocerebellar ataxia since. The first status epilepticus manifested between 15 and 34 years of age in the homozygotes, and at 2 and 4 years in the compound heterozygotes. The epileptic statuses lasted from several days to weeks. Focal, stroke-like lesions were seen in magnetic resonance imaging, but in infantile onset spinocerebellar ataxia these lesions showed no predilection. They varied from resolving small cortical to large hemispheric oedematous lesions, which reached from cerebral cortex to basal ganglia and thalamus and caused permanent necrotic damage and brain atrophy. Brain atrophy with focal laminar cortical necrosis and hippocampal damage was confirmed on neuropathological examination. The objective of our study was to describe the development and progression of encephalopathy in infantile onset spinocerebellar ataxia syndrome, and compare the pathognomonic features with those in other mitochondrial encephalopathies.
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PMID:Recessive twinkle mutations cause severe epileptic encephalopathy. 1930 94

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.
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PMID:A case of Sturge-Weber syndrome with symptomatic hemiplegic migraine: clinical and multimodality imaging data during a prolonged attack. 1973 61

Familial hemiplegic migraine (FHM) is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous disease most commonly linked to CACNA1A gene mutation. Epilepsy rarely occurs in FHM and is seen predominantly with specific CACNA1A gene mutations. Here we report a sporadic case of FHM1 linked to S218L CACNA1A gene mutation with the triad of prolonged hemiplegic migraine, cerebellar symptoms, and epileptic seizures. Epilepsy in this syndrome follows the pattern of isolated unprovoked seizures occurring only during childhood and hemiplegic migraine-provoked seizures occurring during adulthood. Clinical and electrographic status epilepticus can occur during prolonged migraine attacks. We suggest that patients with seizures, ataxia, and hemiplegic migraine be genetically tested for FHM. Patients with prolonged hemiplegic migraine attacks and confusion should be tested with continuous EEG recording to ascertain whether electrographic status is occurring, as intensive antiepileptic treatment not only resolves status but immediately stops hemiplegic migraine and improves associated neurological deficits.
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PMID:Sporadic hemiplegic migraine and epilepsy associated with CACNA1A gene mutation. 2007 Dec 44

Ad-hoc administration of benzodiazepines (BZD) is well established in status epilepticus, but intermittent BZD use in the treatment of chronic epilepsy is little known beyond catamenial epilepsy. We aim to assess the use of acute drug administration (ADA) in the treatment of 24 patients with epilepsy (9 idiopathic generalized, 14 focal symptomatic/cryptogenic, 1 migraine-epilepsy) receiving ADA for (1) prevention of generalized tonic-clonic seizures (GTCS) after minor seizures, (2) prevention of seizures at perceived risk, (3) prevention of seizure clusters. Standard ADA was 10 mg oral clobazam (CLB); one patient received 10 mg rectal diazepam. Concomitant antiepileptic drugs (AED) remained unchanged whenever possible. Ten patients used ADA always correctly, 7 mostly, 7 sporadically or not. Outcome considering seizure control was positive in 44% of all patients (59% of those who actually used ADA): 5 patients seizure free, 1 free of disabling seizures, 4 with >50% reduction in seizure frequency. Eleven had minor or no improvement, 3 patients could not be rated. Thirteen (of 19 possible) patients attempted prevention of seizures or clusters, 10 with full or >50% success (52.6 resp. 76.9%). Prevention of clusters sometimes required higher or repetitive CLB dosing. Self rating of patients who did use ADA was positive or very positive in 88.2%. Retention rate was 66.7% of all patients, and 88.2% of those using ADA. The best results were obtained in idiopathic generalized epilepsy (IGE) patients with seizures habitually triggered by typical factors (sleep deprival, alcohol) but also some others were successful. The only adverse effect was gait ataxia in a multiple-handicapped patient. ADA is an elegant and often successful but underused treatment option for selected patient groups where it can make the difference between becoming seizure free or not. Depending on the individual case it can be applied as monotherapy or in combination with a basis AED. A controlled investigation should follow.
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PMID:Acute administration of benzodiazepines as part of treatment strategies for epilepsy. 2040 51

Cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy (CADASIL) is a hereditary small vessel disease caused by mutations of the Notch3 gene. Clinical manifestations include migraine with or without aura, psychiatric disorders, recurrent ischaemic strokes and cognitive decline. Brain MRI shows confluent hyperintense signal alterations involving characteristically the anterior part of the temporal lobes and widespread areas of the deep and periventricular white matter. Focal or generalised seizures represent a rare neurological manifestation in CADASIL with a frequency of 6-10% in two large series. Status epilepticus, however, has not been reported so far. Herein we describe a patient with CADASIL with an acute focal neurological deficit following a prolonged migraine attack. The symptoms were first interpreted as an ischaemic stroke but subsequently diagnosed to be due to a non-convulsive status epilepticus.
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PMID:Non-convulsive status epilepticus causing focal neurological deficits in CADASIL. 2168 67


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