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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (
vomiting
)
31,883
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effects of the intravenous or intracerebroventricular injection of the stereoisomers, and the racemic mixture, of allylglycine (2-amino-pent-4-enoic acid) have been studied in baboons, Papio papio, with photosensitive
epilepsy
. Enhancement of the natural syndrome of photosensitivy
epilepsy
is seen 1-12 h (maximally at 3-8 h) after L-allyglycine, 100 mg/kg, intravenously, or D,L-allyglycine, 200 mg/kg, intravenously. Such enhancement is seen with a slower onset, and to a lesser, and more variable, extent after D-allyglycine, 500-750 mg/kg, intravenously. Brief focal or generalised seizures occurred (in the absence of intermittent photic stimulation) after L-allyglycine, 150-200 mg/kg, intravenously. This effect is similar to that previously observed after D,L-allyglycine, 300-400 mg/kg. D-Allyglycine, 780 mg/kg, intravenously produced episodes of vertical nystagmus with increased extensor motor tone, but no 'spontaneous' seizures. Intracerebroventricular injection of L-allylglycine, D-allyglycine or D,L-allyglycine, 100 mg in 1 ml saline, did not modify the natural syndrome of photosensitive
epilepsy
. D-Allylglycine, or D,L-allyglycine, 100 mg intracerebroventricularly, after 1-2 h gave rise to a syndrome with
vomiting
, sustained vertical nystagmus, and intermittent extensor spasms. The results are interpreted in terms of regional differences in the metabolism of the two isomers to active compounds that can inhibit glutamic acid decarboxylase. D-Allylglycine is active only at the brain stem and cerebellum because D-amino acid oxidase is largely confined to these brain areas.
...
PMID:Proconvulsant, convulsant and other actions of the D- and L-stereoisomers of allylglycine in the photosensitive baboon, Papio papio. 8 42
We insist about the following notions: contra-indications:
epilepsy
, papillary stasis, important ethylism, folliculitis in the lumbar punction area; preparation by intra-venous hydrocortisone and Primperan in two different syringes (to prevent lipothymia and
vomiting
); localisation by TV of the space L2-L3; cytology and albumin in the cerebrospinal fluid; localised X-rays on the suspected intervertebral disk.
...
PMID:[Technical notes about radiculosaccography (author's transl)]. 22 21
Nine children with the early-onset variant of benign childhood
epilepsy
with occipital paroxysms had protracted, cerebral insult-like, ictal episodes of impairment of consciousness,
vomiting
, tonic deviation of the eyes and hemi-convulsions or generalized tonic-clonic seizures. Long term follow-up indicates that this is an entirely benign epileptic condition.
...
PMID:Cerebral insult-like partial status epilepticus in the early-onset variant of benign childhood epilepsy with occipital paroxysms. 134 35
We reported a clinical course and autopsy results of an 8-year-old severely handicapped girl with marked periventricular leukomalacia. She was well until 3 days prior to first admission in local hospital. Two days prior to admission, she began to vomit. Twelve hours later, she was noted to be lethargic and developed malaise with frequent
vomiting
. At physical examination on admission, she had frequent fits and her posture was decerebrate rigidity. Consciousness disturbance continued for two weeks. Thereafter, she became severely handicapped with spastic quadriplegia, mental retardation and intractable
epilepsy
. She was transferred to our hospital one month later. We cared her totally and carefully with our rehabilitation staff, but during her course several rare happening occurred; she suffered from subdural hemorrhage due to hypocupremia and received an operation for the release of contracture of her hips. She died of acute cardio-respiratory failure at 8 years and 5 months of age. Her autopsy findings were characteristic of the damage to an immature brain during development; cactus formation of cerebellar cortex and periventricular leukomalacia.
...
PMID:[A clinical course and autopsy results of an 8-year-old severely handicapped girl with marked periventricular leukomalacia]. 138 94
We describe the full history and postmortem findings in one of the first identified cases of mitochondrial encephalomyopathy with stroke-like episodes (MELAS). To clarify diagnostic criteria, we analyzed 69 reported cases. The syndrome should be suspected by the following three invariant criteria: (1) stroke-like episode before age 40 yr; (2) encephalopathy characterized by seizures, dementia, or both; and (3) lactic acidosis, ragged-red fibers (RRF), or both. The diagnosis may be considered secure if there are also at least two of the following: normal early development, recurrent headache, or recurrent
vomiting
. There are incomplete syndromes in relatives of patients with the full syndrome and incomplete syndromes might also be encountered in sporadic cases. Some MELAS patients have features of the Kearns-Sayre syndrome (KSS) or myoclonic
epilepsy
with ragged-red fibers (MERRF), but none had the full KSS syndrome. In partial or confusing cases, analysis of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) may point to the correct diagnosis; however, not all patients with clinical MELAS have had the typical mtDNA point mutation and some patients with the mutation have clinical syndromes other than MELAS.
...
PMID:Melas: an original case and clinical criteria for diagnosis. 142
In nine of 62 children with benign occipital
epilepsy
(BOE) the onset was stormy and alarming. The first and often only seizure was characterised by prolonged loss of consciousness lasting up to 12 hours, suggesting an acute cerebral insult. In all but one case there was a tonic aversion either of eyes alone or of both head and eyes which was interpreted as conjugate deviation. The other accompanying ictal motor phenomena were either partial or generalised convulsions. In five patients the seizure was heralded by a headache, and in five cases was accompanied by
vomiting
. The seizure began with visual symptoms in only one patient. The seizure occurred while awake in seven and during sleep in two. The age at onset was from 3 1/4 to 10 years. Interictal EEGs showed occipital discharges typical of BOE, and the clinical course was benign. In four cases a few partial or complex partial seizures recurred during subsequent anticonvulsant therapy, but in five cases seizures never recurred. Anticonvulsants were discontinued in five patients who remained free from seizures for one to 11 1/2 years after withdrawal of treatment. Sudden coma in a child associated with focal features such as tonic deviation of the head or eyes or both may represent a benign
seizure disorder
.
...
PMID:Stormy onset with prolonged loss of consciousness in benign childhood epilepsy with occipital paroxysms. 154 98
In this retrospective study, 81 patients operated by craniotomy for a brain metastasis are reviewed. Mean age is 56.3 years and most of the patients are male (71.6%). Clinically, 79% of the patients present a focal semiology, most frequently with neuropsychologic disturbances (43%);
epilepsy
is found in 31% of the cases. Symptoms related to intracranial hypertension (
vomiting
and headache) are present in 43% of the patients. On C.T.-scan, there is a solitary metastasis in 89% and the most common intracranial location is the frontal lobe (33.3%). The most frequent primary neoplasms are: bronchial adenocarcinoma in 19%, squamous carcinoma of the lung in 11%, melanoma in 12% and unknown origin in 18%. The surgical removal (as judged by the surgeon) is total in 70%, subtotal in 19% and partial in 11%. Standard operative mortality (30 days after craniotomy) is 7.4%. The postoperative course (till the patients leave our department) is excellent in 58% (complete neurologic recovery), steady in 20% (stability of symptoms and neurologic examination) and bad in 22%, with worsening of the neurological deficits. Most of the patients (84% of the patients who survive more than 30 days after the craniotomy) had postoperative whole brain radiotherapy with a hypofractionned schedule (total doses of 15 to 40 Gy with fractions of 200 to 650 cGy). Ten patients had surgery alone. Mean survival is 10.2 months with a follow-up of 12 months to 10 years. Ten patients survived over 18 months and one is still alive almost 4 years after his craniotomy. In this study, the survival is not modified by the primary lesion's histology.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Cerebral metastases. A study of a surgical series of 81 cases]. 160 35
The antecedents of pediatric hospitalization and previous history of somatic disturbance in 101 adolescents aged 12-16 yr hospitalized in a pedopsychiatric unit were compared to those of a representative population of 101 high school adolescents without psychiatric problems. Patients and controls were matched according to age, sex and parents nationality. The result showed that adolescents with psychiatric disorders were significantly more frequently hospitalized during infancy and childhood, particularly for medical reasons. They also presented many more algic syndromes, recurrent headaches, recurrent
vomiting
and
epilepsy
. Thus, recurrent pediatric hospitalization and chronic somatic disturbance appear to be warning signals of a possible psychiatric risk and should lead to a psychological investigation of the child and his relations with the family.
...
PMID:[Antecedents of pediatric pathology in adolescents hospitalized in a department for pediatric psychiatry]. 166 34
The authors report on the case of a 12.5 and year-old epileptic boy with severe acute pancreatitis which appeared 39 months after starting treatment with sodium valproate (VAP) at a daily dosage of 26.6 mg/kg. Twelve days after hospitalization, a pseudocyst of the pancreas developed, leading to cystoduodenostomy 3 months later. Following VPA suppression, no recurrence of pancreatic symptomatology was observed. The pathophysiological mechanism of this adverse side-effect of VPA treatment remains unclear. The appearance of a painful epigastric syndrome and/or
vomiting
in a patient subjected to a VPA treatment indicates the possibility or acute pancreatitis, to be confirmed by blood and urinary determination of amylases and abdominal tomodensitometric examination. Finally, the fact that this side-effect may be severe even lethal, brings into question the prescription of this drug in the management of
epilepsy
.
...
PMID:[Acute pancreatitis caused by sodium valproate. Review of the literature apropos of a case in a child]. 166 40
The clinical and pathologic features of 15 new cases of the uncommon primary or granulomatous angiitis of the central nervous system (PACNS) are described. To date, only 108 such cases have been reported in the English literature. Clinically, most PACNS patients have been young or middle-aged (mean age, 45 years; range, 3 to 96 years), with men outnumbering women slightly by a ratio of 4 to 3. The most frequent presenting complaints are headache, weakness, and confusion; less common complaints are aphasia, dysphasia, nausea or
vomiting
, loss of memory, and
seizure disorder
. There is usually no evidence of a systemic disease; the erythrocyte sedimentation rate is almost invariably normal, and there are no diagnostic laboratory tests. The cerebral angiogram usually shows multifocal, segmental stenosis or irregularity of small and medium-sized leptomeningeal and intracranial blood vessels, often with a beading or aneurysmal appearance, and alterations in blood flow in the affected regions. Anatomically, the angiitis is focal and segmental in distribution. An isolated negative biopsy, therefore, does not rule out the disease. Histologically, PACNS may be granulomatous, necrotizing, or lymphocytic in character, and mixed morphologic types often occur. Large- and small-vessel thrombosis is common. Acute lesions frequently coexist with healing or healed lesions. Involvement of extracranial blood vessels occurs only rarely. Past or current herpes zoster infection and Hodgkin's lymphoma are the most noteworthy clinical associations of PACNS, but whether they are causally related remains uncertain.
...
PMID:Primary (granulomatous) angiitis of the central nervous system: a clinicopathologic analysis of 15 new cases and a review of the literature. 174 Mar
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