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)

We describe two patients with psychogenic seizures of rare semiology. Both patients (a 23-year-old man and a 26-year-old woman) attended the emergency department because status epilepticus with myoclonic seizures had been diagnosed. Seizures were documented with video-electroencephalography. Semiology of seizures were brief myoclonia of both arms resulting in a short elevation of both arms without impairment of consciousness. Ictal EEG registration was without abnormal finding. Psychiatric diagnostic assessment suggested a dissociative disorder and mild depression, respectively. During psychiatric treatment seizures occurred only rarely within a 3-5 months follow-up. One should be aware that juvenile myoclonic epilepsy may be mimicked by psychogenic seizures
...
PMID:Psychogenic seizures mimicking juvenile myoclonic epilepsy: case reports. 1143 21

A young woman with juvenile myoclonic epilepsy had recurrent attacks of myoclonic status epilepticus related to a long history of limited compliance and irregular sleep. The diagnosis of this clinical pattern is based mainly on clinical description. A home video captured an attack.
...
PMID:Myoclonic status epilepticus: video presentation. 1192 Nov 35

In order to outline the clinical and EEG characteristics of recurrent absence status epilepticus (ASE), eight cases with more than two attacks of ASE were studied. Their current ages were between 13 and 84 years, and five of the patients were women. There was a history of epilepsy in five of the patients before the first ASE episode. A varying degree of confusion was the main clinical symptom with associated mild motor signs like perioral, eyelid and generalised myoclonus, seen in one, two and four patients respectively. Two of the patients had juvenile myoclonic epilepsy. One patient had an atypical form of childhood absence epilepsy characterised by recurrent ASE attacks on awakening. There were two patients with phantom absences and late onset generalised convulsions, one patient with perioral myoclonia and absences, and finally two patients with eyelid myoclonia with absences, which are proposed syndromes. On the EEGs that revealed the diagnosis of ASE, there was a marked variability of the generalised multispike and wave discharges. The EEG findings appeared to be syndrome-related with some exceptions. IV Clonazepam lead to a dramatic improvement. Our study shows that the majority of recurrent ASE cases do not fit into the International syndrome classification.
...
PMID:Recurrent absence status epilepticus: clinical and EEG characteristics. 1207 3

Juvenile myoclonic epilepsy (JME) is an idiopathic, age-related generalized epileptic syndrome, featuring generalizedtonic-clonic and absence seizures as well as myoclonic jerks. Except for some case reports, little is known about type and frequency of nonconvulsive status epilepticus (NCSE) in adult patients with JME. In a retrospective study we therefore reviewed all patients with JME, who had been referred to our hospital between 1994 and 1999 for the occurrence of NCSE. Of the 69 patients with JME seen within these 6 years three women had typical absence status-one of them two times-and one woman had impulsive-petit-mal status. All four patients had a history of myoclonic, absence and generalized tonic-clonic seizures. Because of the extreme rarity of impulsive-petit-mal status the corresponding case history is presented in detail. According to our findings the prevalence of NCSE in JME can be estimated at 5.8%, the incidence at 1.2% per year with a clear preponderance of female gender.
...
PMID:Nonconvulsion status epilepticus in patients with juvenile myoclonic epilepsy: types and frequencies. 1207 7

There is an extremely intimate relationship between sleep and epilepsy. In this manuscript I will review the influence that sleep has on epilepsy. Sleep is a potent activator of interictal epileptiform discharges. Sharp waves are infrequent during wakefulness in benign focal epilepsy of childhood, but may occur in runs of several discharges per page in sleep. The interictal discharges become almost continuous in non-REM sleep in the syndrome of encephalopathy with electrical status epilepticus during slow wave sleep. In some patients with West syndrome a hypsarrhythmia pattern may only appear in sleep whereas in others there may be an increase in discharges in a semiperiodic fashion resulting in a burst-suppression like pattern. Seizures appear to have a very close relationship with sleep in certain epilepsy syndromes. In benign focal epilepsy of childhood the seizures occur almost exclusively in sleep, while supplementary sensorimototor area seizures tend to occur in clusters during sleep. Juvenile myoclonic epilepsy has a close relationship with the sleep-wake cycle with seizures tending to occur predominantly on awakening. I also discuss the role of sleep and sleep deprivation in the EEG evaluation of epilepsy.
...
PMID:Effect of sleep on epilepsy. 1248 81

We present a case of a boy with juvenile myoclonic epilepsy (JME) who presented with features of non-convulsive status epilepticus (NCSE). This case highlights the fact that NCSE, even though not a common occurrence in JME, should be kept in mind when a patient with previous history of seizures presents with subtle changes in sensorium with no obvious cause.
...
PMID:Non-convulsive status epilepticus: a rare presentation of juvenile myoclonic epilepsy. 1474 20

Status epilepticus (SE) can take various forms in idiopathic generalized epilepsy (IGE), some of which forms also occur in symptomatic or focal epilepsies. Although the clinical semiology of the SE episodes may be similar in these different epilepsies, the frequency, response to treatment and prognosis differ. (a) Convulsive SE is surprisingly uncommon in IGE and much less common than in the secondarily generalized or partial epilepsies. Also, when it does occur, it usually responds rapidly to treatment. (b) Typical absence SE occurs only in patients with IGE (the subcategories with typical absence seizures) and also in the syndrome of de novo absence SE of late onset. This form of nonconvulsive SE should be differentiated from atypical absence SE, which occurs in the secondarily generalized epilepsy encephalopathies, and from complex partial SE which occurs in focal epilepsy. The clinical symptoms of these three types overlap but the prognosis and response to treatment are different. The mechanisms underlying absence SE are uncertain and may include both genetic and environmental factors. The termination of absence seizures has been hypothesized to be due to persistent activation of a depolarizing current in thalamocortical neurons that inactivates T-type calcium channels. SE could thus result from dysfunction of this channel or mechanisms that hyperpolarize thalamocortical neurons-these include decreased cortical inhibition, increased reticular thalamic neuronal activity or increased thalamocortical neuron GABA(B)-receptor activation. (c) Generalized electrographic SE is encountered in IGE in the syndrome of phantom absence with GTCS. It also occurs in ESES and in the Landau-Kleffner syndrome. The seizure phenomenology overlaps with the focal SE of temporal or frontal lobe epilepsy. (d) Myoclonic SE is also uncommon in IGE but occurs in juvenile myoclonic epilepsy. It is more commonly encountered in progressive myoclonic epilepsies, myoclonic-astatic epilepsy and in the Dravet syndrome. (e) Autonomic status occurs largely in the Panayiotopoulos syndrome. It is included here under the rubric of IGE, although the epilepsy has focal as well as generalized features and its nosological position is controversial. Fifty percent of seizures in this syndrome could be classified as status epilepticus. There is no doubt that convulsive SE can result in cerebral damage. In animal models of focal SE, nonconvulsive forms can also result in cerebral damage, but cerebral damage is not observed in animal models of absence SE. Similarly, cerebral damage seems not to occur in the forms of nonconvulsive SE in human IGE.
...
PMID:Status epilepticus in idiopathic generalized epilepsy. 1782 50

Aggravation of idiopathic generalized epilepsy (IGE) syndromes by inappropriate antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) is increasingly recognized as a serious and common problem. Precipitation of status epilepticus (SE) by inappropriate medication has rarely been reported. We retrospectively studied all adult patients with IGE taking at least one potentially aggravating AED, who developed video-EEG documented SE over 8 years, and whose long-term outcome was favourable after adjustment of medication. We identified 14 patients (seven male patients) aged 15-46 years with a mean duration of epilepsy of 16.4 years. Video-EEG demonstrated typical absence SE (ASE) in five, atypical ASE in five, atypical myoclonic SE (MSE) in three and typical MSE in one. Epilepsy had been misclassified as cryptogenic partial in eight cases and cryptogenic generalized in four. The correct diagnosis proved to be juvenile absence epilepsy (JAE) in six patients, juvenile myoclonic epilepsy (JME) in four, epilepsy with grand mal on awakening (EGMA) in two and childhood absence epilepsy (CAE) in two. All patients had been treated with carbamazepine (CBZ) and had experienced seizure aggravation or new seizure types before referral. Seven patients had polytherapy with phenytoin (PHT), vigabatrin (VGB) or gabapentin (GBP). Potential precipitating factors included dose increase of CBZ or of CBZ and PHT; initiation of CBZ, VGB or GBP; and decrease of phenobarbital. Withdrawal of the aggravating agents and adjustment of medication resulted in full seizure control. This series shows that severe pharmacodynamic aggravation of seizures in IGE may result in ASE or MSE, often with atypical features.
...
PMID:Absence and myoclonic status epilepticus precipitated by antiepileptic drugs in idiopathic generalized epilepsy. 1651 83

We report three patients, who have thalamic lesion and secondary generalized epilepsy with generalized spike wave pattern. The first two patients have unilateral perinatal lesion, one with generalized tonic-clonic seizures on awakening the other with Landau-Kleffner-like syndrome. During the course of the disease both children developed electrical status epilepticus in slow wave sleep (ESES). The third patient has a dominantly unilateral thalamic tumor and epilepsy that mimics juvenile myoclonic epilepsy. All the patients have a lesion located in the inferior-medial-posterior part of the thalamus. The role of some thalamic and subthalamic nuclei in the generalized spike-wave electrical pattern patophysiology is discussed, with emphasis on the possible role of the inhibitory system from the zona incerta.
...
PMID:Thalamic lesion and epilepsy with generalized seizures, ESES and spike-wave paroxysms--report of three cases. 1682 18

Juvenile myoclonic epilepsy (JME) is characterized by a specific pharmacological sensitivity. JME is controlled by certain antiepileptic drugs but may be aggravated by others. Valproate is the treatment of choice of this epilepsy. Among the "newer" antiepileptic drugs those that appear to be useful are lamotrigine, topiramate, zonisamide and levetiracetam. We present a patient with JME who experienced myoclonic status epilepticus every months not controlled with lamotrigine monotherapy (200 mg/d), not controlled with levetiracetam monotherapy (1000 mg/d). Addition of valproate (500 mg/d) to levetiracetam fully controlled the seizures and levetiracetam was reduced to 500 mg/d. The patient is presently seizure free.
...
PMID:[Juvenile myoclonic epilepsy with recurrent myoclonic status: efficacy of valproate]. 1986 7


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 Next >>