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)

We studied 30 patients with partial epilepsy and a radiological or pathological diagnosis of localized neuronal migration disorders, with a view to surgical treatment. Eight patients had identifiable prenatal etiological factors. The frequency of complex partial, partial motor, and secondarily generalized seizures was approximately 70% each. Drop attacks were present in 27%: Their presence usually correlated with a lesion involving the central region. Partial motor or generalized convulsive status epilepticus occurred in 30%, and was most frequently associated with extensive structural abnormalities involving two or more lobes. A full-scale intelligence quotient of less than 80 was found in 44%. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was superior to computed tomography for identification of the dysplastic cortical lesions. In one third, MRI showed only subcortical abnormalities. It did not allow distinction between true pachygyria, focal cortical dysplasia, or the forme fruste of tuberous sclerosis. The epileptogenic area was usually more extensive than the lesion; it was multilobar in more than 70% of patients. Of 26 surgically treated patients, a histological diagnosis of the type of neuronal migration disorder was possible in 22: 12 had focal cortical dysplasia and 10 the forme fruste of tuberous sclerosis. In the remaining 4, no definite histological diagnosis was made, since the maximally abnormal tissue could not be examined. In the latter, and in the 4 nonoperated patients, the diagnosis of neuronal migration disorder was based on imaging findings. The presence of the forme fruste of tuberous sclerosis correlated with delayed psychomotor development and more extensive epileptogenic areas.
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PMID:Focal neuronal migration disorders and intractable partial epilepsy: a study of 30 patients. 178 91

Focal cortical myoclonus is rare. Obvious causes include tumor or atrophy involving the motor strip, but in some cases no cause is apparent. We present 4 patients who started to have focal myoclonus in childhood. All had focal motor seizures as well, and one had recurrent focal motor status epilepticus. All 4 had a mild progressive hemiparesis. Electrographic investigations showed focal epileptic discharges in the contralateral rolandic areas. Radiological studies were unrevealing, but magnetic resonance showed rolandic lesions in 3 patients. At surgery, abnormally wide gyri were found in the distribution demonstrated by magnetic resonance. The pathological substrate was focal cortical dysplasia. All patients have improved considerably following surgery. These findings suggest that focal myoclonus may be due to a rolandic neuronal migration disorder. Visualization of these lesions by magnetic resonance permits development of a surgical strategy leading to optimal treatment of these medically intractable epileptic disorders.
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PMID:Focal cortical myoclonus and rolandic cortical dysplasia: clarification by magnetic resonance imaging. 313 90

Cerebral cortical dysgenesis (CD) is a heterogeneous disorder of cortical development and organization commonly associated with epilepsy, with a variety of subtypes. We reviewed the clinical, EEG and neuroimaging features in 100 adult patients with CD. There were 39 men and 61 women with a median age of 27 years (range 15-63 years). All patients were referred because of medically refractory epilepsy. Median age at seizure onset was 10 years (range 3 weeks to 39 years); in 30 patients, onset was in adulthood. The epilepsy was classified as generalized in 16 patients and localization-related in 84. Of the latter, the epileptic syndromes in decreasing frequency were frontal (32%), temporal (31%), parietal (14%) and occipital (7%). Only 15% of patients had a history of status epilepticus. Prenatal/perinatal problems were reported in 32 patients but these were severe in only four: exposure to drugs (three) and infection (one) during the first trimester. Delayed developmental milestones were seen in 10%, mental retardation in 9%, additional congenital abnormalities in 4% and neurological deficits in 14% of patients. Diagnosis of CD was based on neuroimaging in 70, pathology in four and both methods in the remaining 26. The following subcategories were identified: agyria/diffuse macrogyria (four patients), focal macrogyria (16), focal polymicrogyria (one), focal macrogyria/polymicrogyria associated with a cleft (11), minor gyral abnormalities (seven), subependymal grey matter heterotopia (20), bilateral subcortical laminar grey matter heterotopia (eight), tuberous sclerosis (five), focal cortical dysplasia/microdysgenesis (seven) and dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumours (DNT) (21). Sixty-eight percent of patients had normal CT and 19 out of 36 patients had normal previous conventional MRI. MRI-based hippocampal volume measurements in 47 patients revealed ratios (smaller: larger hippocampus) of < 0.90 in 16, 0.90-0.94 in 14 and > or = 0.95 in 17 patients. EEGs were normal in only five patients. Alpha rhythm was preserved in 78 patients, including one patient with bilateral posterior macrogyria. Localized polymorphic slow activity was present in 43 patients. Five of 68 patients with focal/unilateral CD had only bilateral independent/synchronous spiking and 14 out of 32 with diffuse/bilateral CD only focal/unilateral spiking. In 60 patients with nondiffuse CD or with abnormal gyration or DNT, the epileptiform abnormalities were less extensive than coextensive with the lesion in 28, more extensive than and overlapped the lesion in 18 and remote from the lesion in five; nine patients did not have epileptiform abnormalities. There was poor correlation between the epileptic syndromes and EEG abnormalities and the location/extent of CD as defined by MRI and pathology.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Abnormalities of gyration, heterotopias, tuberous sclerosis, focal cortical dysplasia, microdysgenesis, dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumour and dysgenesis of the archicortex in epilepsy. Clinical, EEG and neuroimaging features in 100 adult patients. 760 83

Typical causes of renovascular hypertension include intramural atherosclerotic lesions of the main renal arteries or their branches and fibromuscular dysplasia of the renal arterial wall with luminal narrowing. We report a patient with new-onset, accelerated hypertension (blood pressure 220/140 mm Hg, status epilepticus, retinal hemorrhages) secondary to a dissection of the anterior division of the right renal artery that was accompanied by hyperreninemia, hyperaldosteronism, and hypokalemia. At presentation in the untreated state, unstimulated plasma renin activity and the serum aldosterone level were markedly elevated. Following right nephrectomy, blood pressure levels normalized without antihypertensive therapy, and plasma renin activity, serum aldosterone and potassium levels normalized. Histologic study of the right renal artery showed an isolated dissection of the anterior branch of the vessel between the muscularis and adventitia that created marked reduction in luminal diameter and renal ischemia. There was no evidence of any other vascular abnormalities, atherosclerosis, or fibromuscular dysplasia. These findings demonstrate that an isolated dissection of a branch of the renal artery may induce profound hyperreninemia and represents a rare, reversible etiology for accelerated hypertension associated with acute encephalopathy.
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PMID:Accelerated hypertension with encephalopathy due to an isolated dissection of a renal artery branch vessel. 820 71

Seizure disorders frequently occur early in life. Seizures are classified as reactive, symptomatic, or idiopathic depending on whether their cause can be identified. Reactive seizures are the result of acute environmental perturbations. Early in life, many stressors can produce seizures and the ultimate outcome may depend on the particular precipitating factor and its intensity. Febrile convulsions are the most common reactive seizures, although they must be differentiated from symptomatic seizures precipitated by fever. Symptomatic seizures are often associated with varying degrees of central nervous system (CNS) insults, including congenital malformations and metabolic storage diseases of the gray matter. These seizures may have age-specific characteristics and may at times be difficult to treat with conventional antiepileptic treatments. To develop a better understanding of the pathophysiology of seizures early in life, we have extensively used animal models of epilepsy. In this chapter, we report our findings with a rat model of developmental cortical dysplasias produced by intrauterine injections of methylazoxymethanol acetate. These rats are more susceptible to kainic acid, flurothyl, and hyperthermic seizures than normal rats. Rats with severe cortical dysplasia are most susceptible to seizures. We have also studied the mechanisms involved in the control of seizures during development because status epilepticus is more prevalent in infants than in adults. Our data suggest that the substantia nigra may play a crucial role in status epilepticus as a function of age. In the adult substantia nigra two regions mediate opposing effects on seizures following infusions of gamma-aminobutyric acid type A (GABAA) agents. One region is located in the anterior substantia nigra, and muscimol infusions in this region mediate anticonvulsant effects. The second region is in the posterior substantia nigra, and here muscimol infusions produce proconvulsant effects. In situ hybridization data demonstrate that, at the cellular level, neurons in the two substantia nigra regions differ in the amount of hybridization grains for GABAA receptor alpha 1 and gamma 2L subunit mRNAs. In developing male rats, only the "proconvulsant" region is present up to the age of 21 days. The transition from the immature to mature substantia nigra mediated seizure control occurs between age 25 and 30 days. The identification of age-dependent functional networks involved in the containment of seizures may lead to possible new pharmacologic strategies to control seizures, thus aiding the development of age-appropriate treatments of seizure disorders.
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PMID:Age-dependent vulnerability to seizures. 1051 12

We report a female infant with status epilepticus amauroticus and intractable focal motor seizures associated with congenital cortical dysplasia. EEG demonstrated persistent epileptiform discharges over the right parieto-temporal regions extending to occipital areas. She required cortical resection of the epileptic zone at age 8 months given failure of very high dose antiepileptic combinations. Histological analysis of a sample of cortex resected from the right central parieto-temporal region, identified by electrocorticography as the focus of epileptic activity, showed cortical dysplasia. The seizures ceased and the infant gained full vision after 48 hours. During an 8-year follow-up period she has had a few short-lived seizures, currently controlled with carbamazepine and vigabatrin. Her cognition and speech are intact. This case demonstrates that: (1) resection of a central temporo-parietal focus, which may have spread to the occipital regions, may result in complete visual recovery and cessation of seizures; and (2) EEG should be considered in every infant with alleged delayed visual maturation, to rule out concealed epileptic activity.
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PMID:Prolonged epileptic blindness in an infant associated with cortical dysplasia. 1241 22

We present a clinico-pathological case report in which both cortical dysplasia and epilepsy coexisted: a 30 year old male who was dead on arrival at hospital. One and a half hours earlier he had developed complex partial status with peri-oral cyanosis. At post mortem examination his brain showed bilateral occipital frontal polymicrogyria with unlayered neuronal migration disorder; in other parts there were fourth layer migration disorders. The white matter exhibited multicystic encephalopathy. In the heart there was chronic interstitial and perivascular fibrosis, although he died of a cardiac arrest. Bilateral frontal-occipital polymicrogyria is highly epileptogenic. This was a sporadic case and we cannot define a clear aetiology. There was a pathological cardiac condition without previous vascular risk factors which might be related to repetition of seizures and possibly to his sudden death during status epilepticus.
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PMID:Bilateral fronto-occipital polymicrogyria and epilepsy. 1146 27

Little documentation of the correlation between MR imaging findings in isolated cerebellar cortical dysplasia (CCD) and its neuropathologic characteristics exists in the recent literature. We documented a postmortem neuropathologic study of a clinically and radiologically well-documented case of CCD in a neonate with severe hypotonia and status epilepticus. MR imaging revealed a global vermian hypoplasia with marked cortical dysplasia. CCD was associated with a voluminous heterotopic mass. The postmortem neuropathologic study confirmed vermian hypoplasia and CCD, which consisted of right cerebellar cortical polymicrogyria with subcortical heterotopia. CCD is a pathologic entity that could be well diagnosed with MR imaging even in the neonatal period.
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PMID:Neuropathologic and MR imaging correlation in a neonatal case of cerebellar cortical dysplasia. 1216 64

We present a clinico-pathological case report in which both cortical dysplasia and epilepsy coexisted: a 30 year old male who was dead on arrival at hospital. One and a half hours earlier he had developed complex partial status with peri-oral cyanosis. At post mortem examination his brain showed bilateral occipital frontal polymicrogyria with unlayered neuronal migration disorder; in other parts there were fourth layer migration disorders. The white matter exhibited multicystic encephalopathy. In the heart there was chronic interstitial and perivascular fibrosis, although he died of a cardiac arrest. Bilateral frontal-occipital polymicrogyria is highly epileptogenic. This was a sporadic case and we cannot define a clear aetiology. There was a pathological cardiac condition without previous vascular risk factors which might be related to repetition of seizures and possibly to his sudden death during status epilepticus.
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PMID:Bilateral fronto-occipital polymicrogyria and epilepsy. 1218 64

A uniquely successful neurosurgical intervention in a four-month-old child suffering from status epilepticus (SE) caused by focal cortical dysplasia is reported. Seizures appeared at postnatal day 10 and culminated as medically intractable focal motor SE three months later. The first MRI scan at postnatal week 2 was inconclusive; electroclinical features typical of malformations of cortical development led to the repetition of MRI at the age of 3 months that confirmed the correct diagnosis. Since all medical trials including thiopental anaesthesia have been unsuccessful in treatment of SE, urgent resection of the right frontal and parietal lobes was performed at 4 months of age. One month later, the child had become seizure-free and her psychomotor development is proceeding well. Histopathological analysis of the resected brain tissue revealed abnormalities typical of the Taylor's type of focal cortical dysplasia. The aim of the report is to encourage considering surgery in selected patients suffering from medically intractable SE early in life.
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PMID:Life-saving epilepsy surgery for status epilepticus caused by cortical dysplasia. 1244 23


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