Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (vomiting)
31,883 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This study analysed the bacterial aetiology and outcome of childhood meningitis observed over an 11-year period. Charts of 70 children with this diagnosis were reviewed. Three children were under 1 month of age, five were between 1 and 3 months and 60 were between 3 months and 5 years. The remaining two were over 5 years. There were 36 females and 34 males. The presenting symptoms in decreasing order of frequency were fever 86%, vomiting 29%, poor feeding 19%, seizure 14% and lethargy 14%. Aetiological organisms were as follows: Haemophilus influenzae 66%, Streptococcus pneumoniae 24%, Neisseria meningitidis 4%, Group B Streptococci 4%, and Staphylococcus aureus 2%. All H. influenzae isolates except one were sensitive to ampicillin. None of the S. pneumoniae isolates were resistant to penicillin. Complications occurred in 26% of the patients and included subdural effusion 23%, hearing loss 14%, seizure disorder 10%, developmental delay 9%, hydrocephalus 6% and motor deficit 30%. One patient died. Among H. influenzae cases, one of the 15 patients treated with steroids developed hearing loss. In contrast, four out of 31 who did not receive steroid therapy suffered from hearing loss. Haemophilus influenzae type b is the predominant cause of childhood bacterial meningitis in Saudi Arabia. Universal H. influenzae type b vaccination for children is highly recommended.
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PMID:Childhood bacterial meningitis in Saudi Arabia. 957 Jun 46

Benign occipital epilepsy of childhood is an idiopathic partial epilepsy syndrome with elementary visual symptomatology, frequently associated with other ictal phenomena. Seizures are usually followed by postictal headache and are often associated with interictal occipital rhythmic paroxysmal EEG activity that appears only after eye closure. In some children the ictal visual symptoms or the interictal EEG abnormalities may not be demonstrated. The clinical and/or EEG manifestations of other forms of idiopathic partial or generalized epilepsy may be found in association. Occipital spikes in non-epileptic children with defective vision, occipital slow spike-and-wave found in some patients with the Lennox-Gastaut syndrome, focal epilepsy due to occipital lesions, seizures originating in the temporal lobe secondary to an occipital abnormality, and complicated or basilar migraine must be considered in the differential diagnosis. Early-onset benign occipital epilepsy or seizure susceptibility syndrome deserves to be considered separately. It has been defined by Panayiotopoulos as consisting of brief, infrequent attacks or prolonged status epilepticus and characterized by ictal deviation of the eyes and/or head and vomiting, occurring in children usually between the ages of 3 and 7 years. Advances in molecular genetics will help decide whether these two disorders are indeed distinct. Benign occipital and benign rolandic epilepsy are commonly associated with migraine. The selective involvement of the occipital lobe in migraine has not been fully explained. The association between benign occipital epilepsy and migraine is likely related to this underlying mechanism as well. The "fixation off" phenomenon or blocking of occipital epileptic discharges by eye opening is not specific to benign occipital epilepsy of childhood and may be found in symptomatic epilepsies as well. Migraine and epilepsy are distinct disorders, both as far as their pathophysiologic mechanisms and clinical symptomatology are concerned. There is however an overlap in some patients and a causal relationship may exist in some, leading to clinically distinct migraine epilepsy syndromes. Here too, clarification of the molecular basis of migraine and of epilepsy will throw light on the nature of the relationship between the two conditions.
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PMID:The benign occipital epilepsies of childhood: an overview of the idiopathic syndromes and of the relationship to migraine. 1048

In a previous report of 900 patients with epileptic seizures, 24 children had ictal vomiting. Twelve had a previously unrecognised syndrome of early onset benign childhood occipital seizures (EBOS) and three had symptomatic epilepsy. The other nine children with extraoccipital EEG foci or normal EEG are described in this paper based on a prospective follow up for a median of 9 years after their first seizure. All had normal neurology, mental state, and development. All seizures of all but one patient occurred in sleep. Seizures manifested with ictal vomiting (nine), deviation of the eyes (four), speech arrest (three), hemiconvulsions (five), oropharyngolaryngeal symptoms, and hypersalivation (one) with or without impairment of consciousness. Median age at onset was 5 years, seizures were infrequent and remitted at a median age of 6. Four children had a single fit, four had two to three, and only one child had many seizures before the initiation of treatment. This study certifies that idiopathic childhood partial seizures with ictal vomiting may occur with EEG spike foci in other than the occipital regions or EEG may be normal. Despite some clinico-EEG differences from the EBOS, childhood seizures with ictal vomiting, and extraoccipital EEG foci are of equally excellent prognosis. Their existence on the border between rolandic and occipital seizures is consistent with a unified concept of a benign childhood partial seizure susceptibility syndrome.
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PMID:Extraoccipital benign childhood partial seizures with ictal vomiting and excellent prognosis. 988 59

This open-label study was performed to evaluate efficacy and safety of Felbamate (FBM) add-on therapy in drug-refractory partial epilepsy. We evaluated 36 patients (12 males) aged 11-68 years (mean 29.8) in which FBM was titrated gradually from 300 mg/day to a mean total maintenance daily dose of 1936 mg. Patients were monitored according to clinical practice and performed regularly laboratory tests. Mean follow-up of FBM therapy was 10 months (range 2-27). In this study, 5% of patients resulted to be seizure-free, 11% showed a seizure reduction more than 75%, 23% decreased their seizure frequency between 50% and 75% (P = 0.0001). The adverse events which were reported more frequently were: nausea, vomiting, anorexia and weight loss. Even if the patients sample is small FBM proves its efficacy in partial epilepsy, showing a relatively well tolerated profile.
Epilepsy Res 1999 Mar
PMID:Felbamate in refractory partial epilepsy. 1019 11

It has recently been recognized that D-2-hydroxyglutaric aciduria is a distinct neurometabolic disorder with a severe and a mild phenotype. Whereas the clinical and neuroimaging findings of the severe phenotype were homogeneous among the patients, the findings in the mild phenotype were much more variable, leaving the clinical picture poorly defined. We were able to collect the clinical, biochemical and neuroimaging data on an additional 8 patients with D-2-hydroxyglutaric aciduria, 4 with the severe and 4 with the mild phenotype. With the new information, it becomes clear that the mild phenotype shares the essential characteristics of the severe phenotype. The most frequent findings, regardless of the clinical phenotype, are epilepsy, hypotonia and psychomotor retardation. Additional findings, mainly occurring in the severe phenotype, are episodic vomiting, cardiomyopathy, inspiratory stridor and apnoeas. The most consistent MRI finding is enlargement of the lateral ventricles, occipital more than frontal. Regardless of the clinical phenotype, early MRI shows in addition subependymal cysts and signs of delayed cerebral maturation. Later MRI may reveal multifocal cerebral white-matter abnormalities. Two patients had vascular abnormalities, but it is as yet unclear whether these are related to D-2-hydroxyglutaric aciduria or are incidental findings.
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PMID:D-2-hydroxyglutaric aciduria: further clinical delineation. 1040 77

Cyclic vomiting syndrome (CVS) is manifested by episodic occurrence of emesis that may be precipitated by stress and fatigue. The attacks begin in childhood and often taper in frequency into young and middle adult life. They frequently occur in clusters with intervening normal periods of days, weeks, months, or years. In these regards, CVS shares similarities with many other episodic disorders of brain, heart, and skeletal muscle. These disorders include the periodic paralyses, episodic movement disorders, cardiac dysrhythmia syndromes, epilepsy, and migraine headache. Because of some of the similarities among these disorders, it has been hypothesized that common pathophysiologic mechanisms may underlie some of these disorders. CVS may also share a similar pathophysiologic basis, and this idea may lead to novel approaches to investigation of this fascinating and difficult disorder.
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PMID:Channelopathies: ion channel disorders of muscle as a paradigm for paroxysmal disorders of the nervous system. 1049 46

Ritonavir (RTV), a protease inhibitor, and carbamazepine (CBZ), an anticonvulsant, were administered concurrently to a patient who had human immunodeficiency virus infection and epilepsy. The combination resulted in elevated serum concentrations of CBZ, with accompanying vomiting, vertigo, and transient liver dysfunction. After discontinuing RTV and reducing the dosage of CBZ, the serum concentration of CBZ returned to the optimal range, symptoms subsided, and liver function returned to baseline. Carbamazepine is metabolized in the liver to a large extent by the cytochrome P450 (CYP) system, especially CYP3A4, 2C8, and 1A2, whereas RTV is metabolized primarily by CYP3A and is a potent inhibitor of this enzyme. Careful clinical monitoring may help prevent adverse drug interactions when these drugs are administered concurrently.
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PMID:Potential interaction between ritonavir and carbamazepine. 1090 77

This is a systematic-prospective study of occipital seizures with elementary visual hallucinations in 18 patients with symptomatic occipital epilepsy. Qualitative and chronological analysis showed that visual seizures usually lasted for seconds to 1-3 minutes. Three patients also had longer visual seizures of 20-150 minutes. Elementary visual hallucinations mainly consisted of coloured and small circular patterns flashing or multiplying in a temporal hemifield. Flashing lights or non-circular patterns were rare. Three patients experienced achromatic flickering lights. None of the patients had the over 4 minute, linear, zigzag, and achromatic or black and white patterns characteristic of migraine visual aura. Blurring of vision could precede visual hallucinations. Visual seizures were usually frequent, often occurring in multiple clusters daily or weekly. They usually occurred alone but they often advanced to other occipital and extra-occipital ictal symptoms. In 7 patients they progressed to temporal lobe seizure manifestations, and in 6 to motor partial seizures or ipsilateral hemiconvulsions. All but 2 had secondary generalised tonic clonic convulsions. Ictal blindness ab initio occurred in 2 and ictal, mainly orbital headache in another 2 patients. One patient had ictal vomiting as an occasional symptom. Postictal headache, often severe and indistinguishable from migraine, occurred in two thirds of the patients, even after brief visual seizures without convulsions. Despite relevant structural lesions in brain imaging, 10 patients had a normal mental and neurological state. In 8 patients, EEG was also normal or nonspecific. Misdiagnosis of visual seizures as visual aura of migraine was common and 3 patients were misdiagnosed as suffering from migraine. The differential diagnosis between migraine and the occipital epilepsies is reviewed. It is concluded that elementary visual hallucinations, blindness or both, alone or followed by headache and vomiting of symptomatic occipital epilepsy are identical to those of idiopathic occipital epilepsy. Progress to temporal lobe structures is different and consistent with symptomatic occipital lobe epilepsy. The clinical diagnosis of visual seizures is easy if individual elements of duration, colour, shape, size, location, movement, speed of development and progress are identified. They are markedly different from visual aura of migraine, although they often trigger migrainous headache, probably by activating trigeminovascular or brain stem mechanisms.
Epileptic Disord 1999 Dec
PMID:Visual phenomena and headache in occipital epilepsy: a review, a systematic study and differentiation from migraine. 1093 55

In a recent proposal, the Commission on Classification and Terminology of the International League Against Epilepsy recognized early-onset childhood epilepsy with occipital spikes (Panayiotopoulos type), differentiating it from the only other type of childhood epilepsy with occipital spikes previously accepted: late-onset childhood epilepsy with occipital spikes (Gastaut type). The importance of this newly recognized syndrome of benign childhood partial seizures is that it is very common-only 2.4 times less frequent than benign rolandic epilepsy, and of equally excellent prognosis. It is characterized by a unique seizure type comprising a combination of autonomic and behavioral disturbances, vomiting, deviation of the eyes, and often with impairment of consciousness that can progress to convulsions. These commonly last for more than 3 minutes and in one quarter of cases for hours. One or more of these symptoms can predominate or be absent. Eyes can remain open without deviation, ictal vomiting might not occur, and autonomic and behavioral disturbances can predominate, particularly in the early stages of the ictus, and be missed in nocturnal seizures. Age at onset is 5 years, with a singular or a median of three seizures, which are predominantly nocturnal. Interictal electroencephalography (EEG) frequently shows occipital paroxysms or occipital spikes but one-fifth of the cases have only extraoccipital spikes on normal EEG. Treatment might not be needed. Panayiotopoulos syndrome, like rolandic epilepsy, needs recognition by the general pediatrician because of the invariably excellent prognosis and also because it can be misdiagnosed as an acute cerebral insult.
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PMID:Benign childhood epileptic syndromes with occipital spikes: new classification proposed by the International League Against Epilepsy. 1096 95

Photosensitivity is a typical feature of photosensitive epilepsy which is usually considered a form of idiopathic generalized epilepsy. Partial seizures featuring visual symptoms are rarely reported in photosensitive epilepsy. In this study, we describe 13 neurologically normal patients in whom daytime seizures were always induced by television and began with elementary visual hallucinations, followed frequently by vomiting, headache and then secondary generalization. Three patients additionally reported nocturnal seizures, which have not been described in previous studies. Two of these latter patients had generalized tonic-clonic seizures, the other always awoke from sleep and could describe typical visual hallucinations at the beginning of the seizure. EEG features included normal background activity and occipital spikes or spike-waves in all but two patients. Eight patients also showed generalized epileptiform activity during intermittent photic stimulation. Seizure frequency was low in all. Apart from two patients, who refused treatment, all patients received antiepileptic drugs. Only one patient continued to have rare seizures after treatment; in the others seizure control was achieved with monotherapy. We conclude that reflex occipital lobe epilepsy is an idiopathic form of the benign partial epilepsies, which may overlap with one another.
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PMID:Reflex occipital lobe epilepsy. 1098 3


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