Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0038220 (
status epilepticus
)
7,272
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 62-year-old woman developed neurologic deficits 7 months after pulmonary lobectomy for alveolar cell carcinoma of the lung. CT scan of the head demonstrated two metastases with marked peritumoral edema. Administration of Decadron, chemotherapy and 3,000 rad cranial radiation resulted in dramatic improvement of dysphasia and right hand paresis. Almost 2 months later, rhythmic, involuntary movements of the left hand developed. There was progression to multifocal seizures,
grand mal seizures
, postictal depression,
status epilepticus
, and coma, with death 9 days after onset of the movement disorder. Bronchoalveolar carcinoma was widely disseminated in lungs and bones, and as three metastases in brain. Bland "ischemic" necrosis in a pseudolaminar pattern was present in the neocortex. Innumerable Cowdry type A intranuclear inclusion bodies were seen in neurons, astrocytes, and oligodenodroglia. Immunofluorescence demonstrated Herpes simplex virus type 2 antigen and electron microscopy revealed virions with the morphology of the Herpes group. The case is significant for (1) the concurrence of intracranial metastases and Herpes simplex encephalitis, and (2) the causal agent, Herpes simplex virus type 2. The implication for the clinical neurocientist is the potential in a patient with systemic cancer, for the causation of neurologic complications by more than one factor or mechanism.
...
PMID:Herpes simplex type 2 encephalitis concurrent with known cerebral metastases. 22 22
Senegalese baboons (Papio papio), with a natural syndrome of photosensitive epilepsy, consistently show generalized myoclonic jerks if stimulated stroboscopically at hourly intervals, two to eight hours after the intravenous administration of allylglycine, 200 mg/kg. This provides a model for testing the acute antiepileptic effects of established or new drugs. The relationship between concentration of drug, antiepileptic action, and acute neurological toxic effects can be studied. Pnehobarbital (15 mg/kg) and diazepam (0;5 to 1.5 mg/kg) were highly effective in the absence of signs of toxic reaction (plasma levels: phenobarbital sodium, 0.7 to 1.7 mg/100 ml; diazepam, greater than 0.5 mug/ml). After administration of carbamazepine (30 to 40 mg/kg) and diphenylhydantoin sodium (40 to 50 mg/kg), antiepileptic action was seen, but was accompanied by severe toxic signs (nystagmus and ataxia). Sulthiame (20 to 125 mg/kg) and ethosuximide (50 to 100 mg/kg) had little antiepileptic activity and no acute toxic effects. This primate model may aid the identification of new drugs that are active against
grand mal seizures
and
status epilepticus
.
...
PMID:A primate model for testing anticonvulsant drugs. 23 98
1. Epilepsy, a common chronic neurological disorder, constitutes an important medical problem especially as in the developing countries there is a great dearth and shortage of health personnel, especially trained ones, in clinical neurosciences. The prevalence of epilepsy in developing countries is probably higher than in the Caucasians although accurate epidemiological data are lacking. 2. Epilepsy is discussed with special regard to the need for accurate diagnosis, and the difficulties encountered in developing countries. 3. Pharmacotherapy should be as simple as possible and suggestions are made on the essential drugs useful in the control of epilepsy with special reference to developing countries and in the context of economics and ready availability.
Grand mal
and focal epilepsies could be controlled by phenobarbitone, with phenytoin, sulthiame and carbamazepine kept as reserves or adjuncts. Minor (generalised) epilepsies could be controlled by ethosuximide, with clonazepam and sodium valproate (sodium dipropylacetate) as reserve drugs and adjuncts. For
status epilepticus
, diazepam is effective and readily available, with clonazepam and phenytoin as alternatives. 4. The problems in the management of epilepsy in the developing countries include lack of facilities and personnel to ensure accurate diagnosis and treatment, inadequate supply or non-availability of drugs, high defaulting rate of patients, the adverse and often pernicious social stigmatisation of the epileptic. 5. Possible solutions to some of these problems include integration of management (in simple terms) of convulsive disorders into the basic health system of delivery of health care in developing countries, aggressive pursuit of health education of the public by governmental and non-governmental agencies, active, intensive and sustained promotion of training of health personnel in clinical neurosciences and research aimed at producing long-acting anticonvulsants.
...
PMID:Treatment of epilepsy: with special reference to developing countries. 40 46
Ruthenium red was administered to mice and cats intracranially or intraperitoneally. In mice, intracisternal administration produced
status epilepticus
and tonic convulsions. In contrast, intraperitoneal administration induced total flaccid paralysis lasting several hours. These effects of Ruthenium red were partially blocked by the simultaneous administration of CaCl2. EDTA, at doses much greater than those of Ruthenium red, produced effects similar to those of the dye, which were also blocked by CaCl2 administration. In cats, intraventricular or intrahippocampal administration of Ruthenium red through a permanently implanted cannula produced after a few minutes subclinical paroxysmal activity in all brain regions recorded. After several hours the animals developed typical
grand mal seizures
. Intraperitoneal injection of Ruthenium red to cats did not affect the EEG but markedly depressed muscular activity. Administration of carbachol to the latter animals produced myoclonic responses. These results are discussed in relation to the inhibitory effect of Ruthenium red on Ca2+ transport and binding to membranes, and to the role of this cation on neurotransmitter release.
...
PMID:Convulsions or flaccid paralysis induced by ruthenium red depending on route of administration. 82 18
Hyperthyroidism in childhood has a relative incidence of 5%. The presence of epilepsy secondary to thyrotoxicosis is very unusual. We report the case of a four-year old boy with thyrotoxicosis due to Graves' disease. This patient developed a generalized
tonic-clonic seizure
followed by left sided partial motor
status epilepticus
. The EEG was markedly abnormal. The EEG was normal after five months of the ablative therapy. At the present time the patient is seizure-free without any antiepileptic medication and receiving replacement therapy with thyroxin due to post-ablation hypothyroidism. We conclude that this is the first reported case with this association in our country. We discuss the possible pathophysiological mechanism involved in the development of seizures in this patient.
...
PMID:[Epilepsy and thyrotoxicosis in a 4-year-old boy]. 138 40
In 51 children with different types of epilepsy, blood flow velocities in the middle cerebral artery were recorded continuously by transcranial Doppler sonography during a standard electroencephalogram of 30 min duration. In 16 children 33 epileptic seizures were recorded. During tonic seizures, the mean flow velocity increased to a maximum of 133%-191% (median 160%) of the baseline values.
Tonic-clonic seizures
were also accompanied by a velocity increase. During absence seizures the mean flow velocity decreased to a minimum of 46%-82% (median 71%) of the baseline values. Changes in cerebral metabolism and arterial blood pressure in the presence of disturbed autoregulation are thought to be factors causing these alterations. No alteration of the flow velocities occurred in cases of petit-mal status, electrical
status epilepticus
and in 35 children with generalized epileptic discharges of up to 5 s duration without clinical manifestations.
...
PMID:Intracranial blood flow velocities during seizures and generalized epileptic discharges. 139 36
Next to tonic-clonic seizures psychomotor (complex focal) seizures are the most common form of all epileptic seizures, except in infancy where they are seen rarely. Differently from generalised non convulsive seizures (like petit mal absences), their first appearance has no typical age limit, however, their proportion to other forms of seizures increases in adolescence and adults especially between the third and fifth decade of life. The main symptom is the disorder of consciousness which lasts at least more than half a minute, normally several minutes in completely distinct seizures, which doesn't begin abruptly and which often ends ill defined. This twilight attack is proceeded by an aura of sensory, psychic or vegetative character. The aura is followed either by a transitory state of immobility and later by motor phenomena or at once by motor phenomena in the form of diverse automatisms of variable intensity, reaching from mild movements in the oral region over verbal expressions to highly dramatic scenes, often accompanied by vegetative symptoms. Tonic versive and tonic symmetrical or tonic asymmetrical seizure symptoms are quite often motor variants which also can lead to sudden drops. Psychomotor attacks can be reduced to "pseudo-absences", however, they also can develop into tonic-clonic seizures (
Grand mal
). Generally, the succession of seizure symptoms is constant in the same patient, the expression can differ from seizure to seizure. Psychomotor attacks can be spread over the whole day or can show a strict connection to sleep, in the course they can likely occur in clusters and can accumulate to a continuous or discontinuous form of psychomotor
status epilepticus
. Predominantly, but not exclusively psychomotor attacks start from the temporal lobe, whereas neocortical temporal attacks (especially of lateral posterior origin) can be distinguished from those coming from the limbic system, especially from hippocampal or mesio-basal temporal structures and from the nucleus amygdalae. About 20% of the psychomotor attacks are of frontal origin coming from the mesial frontal region or from the gyrus cinguli anterior. Also seizures of occipital or parietal origin can spread so quickly that the seizure itself is impressing as a "temporal lobe attack". On account of that, epilepsies with psychomotor attacks cannot be compared to temporal lobe epilepsies. The etiology of psychomotor epilepsies is closely connected to the topographic site of the temporal lobe, who is especially vulnerable for traumatic lesions, cerebral edema and hypoxemia. Also small dysgeneses, heterotopies or small abnormalities of vessels are relatively often found in surgical specimens.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Psychomotor epilepsy: phenomenology, localization, pathogenesis and therapy]. 219 20
A community-based epidemiological study of neurological disorders was performed in a rural area in Ethiopia. The most prevalent neurological disorder identified was epilepsy, found in 316 persons. The prevalence of epilepsy was 5.2/1000 inhabitants at risk, 5.8 for males, 4.6 for females. The highest age-specific prevalence was found for ages 10-19 years.
Generalized tonic-clonic seizures
were the most common seizure type and occurred in 81%. On clinical grounds, partial seizures occurred in 20% and in 29% of these secondary generalization followed. During seizures, 8.5% had been injured by burns and 5.7% by trauma. Eighty-four percent had seizures at least monthly. Seizures occurred in 4.8% of siblings. Traditional treatment with local herbs, holy water and amulets was the most common. Only 1.6% had been treated with recognized antiepileptic drugs. Mental retardation was the most common associated disorder, found in 7.9% of the persons with epilepsy. During a period of 2 years, 8 persons died of
status epilepticus
and 1 from severe burns as a result of falling into a domestic fire during a seizure. EEG was recorded in 73%. Epileptiform activity occurred in 18%.
...
PMID:Clinical and electroencephalographic characteristics of epilepsy in rural Ethiopia: a community-based study. 228 82
Status epilepticus
was induced by injection of homocysteine thiolactone to rats with epileptogenic cortical cobalt lesions. Either standard phenytoin or ACC-9653 (a phenytoin prodrug) was injected after the second generalized
tonic-clonic seizure
. Rats treated with ACC-9653 had significantly poorer treatment outcomes than rats treated with standard phenytoin, although no differences were found in the concentration of phenytoin in plasma or brain 65 min after injection.
...
PMID:Efficacy of ACC-9653 (a phenytoin prodrug) in experimental status epilepticus in the rat. 232 17
187 patients with histologically proven primary neoplasms underwent computed tomography (CT) of the brain following intravenous administration of contrast medium. Eight developed focal epileptic seizures 2 to 4 minutes after the start of the injection. In three of these patients, in whom there was CT evidence of bilateral mass lesions of the brain, this epileptic activity became generalised into
grand mal seizures
, and two died in
status epilepticus
. In the other five patients with unilateral deposits in the brain, the focal fits corresponded to the site of the lesion shown by CT. Three of the patients had follow-up electroencephalography (EEG) examinations which showed unilateral focal activity, and their EEG foci correlated with the CT findings.
...
PMID:Epilepsy in patients with brain metastases triggered by intravenous contrast medium. 250 87
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Next >>