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Query: UMLS:C0149958 (complex partial seizures)
2,563 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Detailed neurologic studies, high-field-strength MR imaging, and CT scanning were performed preoperatively in 53 patients with intractable complex partial seizures who underwent surgical treatment for epilepsy. Macroscopic structural (tumoral or vascular) lesions were found in 28% of patients. The remainder had pathologic findings consistent with mesial temporal gliosis. Tumors were found in 22% of the patients and were benign or of low-grade malignancy in every case. MR was accurate in the preoperative diagnosis of structural lesions, including very small occult tumors and cryptic vascular malformations. In patients with mesial temporal gliosis, there was correlation between the MR observation of a unilaterally dilated anterior temporal horn and the EEG-identified seizure focus and side of temporal lobectomy. However, MR demonstrated T2-weighted signal abnormalities correlating with the epileptogenic focus in only 8% of cases of mesial temporal gliosis. MR provided useful information in 28% of patients who underwent surgery for refractory complex partial epilepsy. MR obviated invasive EEG monitoring in 93% of the patients with structural lesions. MR was useful in only 8% of the patients with pathologic changes of mesial temporal gliosis.
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PMID:MR imaging in patients with intractable complex partial epileptic seizures. 210 23

Detailed neurologic studies, high-field-strength MR imaging, and CT scanning were performed preoperatively in 53 patients with intractable complex partial seizures who underwent surgical treatment for epilepsy. Macroscopic structural (tumoral or vascular) lesions were found in 28% of patients. The remainder had pathologic findings consistent with mesial temporal gliosis. Tumors were found in 22% of the patients and were benign or of low-grade malignancy in every case. MR was accurate in the preoperative diagnosis of structural lesions, including very small occult tumors and cryptic vascular malformations. In patients with mesial temporal gliosis, there was correlation between the MR observation of a unilaterally dilated anterior temporal horn and the EEG-identified seizure focus and side of temporal lobectomy. However, MR demonstrated T2-weighted signal abnormalities correlating with the epileptogenic focus in only 8% of cases of mesial temporal gliosis. MR provided useful information in 28% of patients who underwent surgery for refractory complex partial epilepsy. MR obviated invasive EEG monitoring in 93% of the patients with structural lesions. MR was useful in only 8% of the patients with pathologic changes of mesial temporal gliosis.
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PMID:MR imaging in patients with intractable complex partial epileptic seizures. 210 25

Neoplastic meningitis, an unusual complication of systemic cancer, is becoming more common as cancer patients live longer. Although leptomeningeal metastases from solid tumors are usually associated with multifocal neurological signs, the authors report on 4 patients who presented with normal findings on neurological examination. One man had severe headache and complex partial seizures. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain revealed gadolinium enhancement of multiple cranial nerves. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) cytology was positive for melanoma. One woman presented with severe migratory retroorbital headaches. MRIs of the brain with and without gadolinium appeared normal. CSF cytology was positive for pulmonary adenocarcinoma. One man presented with morning headache, and a woman presented with back pain. Both had CSF cytologies positive for lymphoma. Neoplastic meningitis can occur without abnormalities on neurological or MRI examinations. Lumbar punctures should be performed on cancer patients with severe, unusual, or prolonged headaches.
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PMID:Neoplastic meningitis with normal neurological findings. Magnetic resonance imaging results. 757 52

Between January 1992 and June 1995, 160 patients were presurgically evaluated for medically refractory epilepsy by the Epilepsy Monitoring and Surgery Team at the University Hospital of Gent. All these patients underwent a comprehensive presurgical evaluation, including extensive neurological history and examination, video-EEG monitoring of interictal EEG and habitual seizures, CT and optimum MR. In a large subgroup of these patients a comprehensive neuro-psychological examination and interictal 18FDG-PET were performed. After the non-invasive phase of the presurgical evaluation, a bilateral carotid angiography and intracarotid amytal procedure was planned in 27 patients to establish hemispheric language dominance and bilateral memory function. After proper selection, 14 patients underwent invasive video-EEG monitoring with intracranial implantation of parenchymal and/or subdural electrodes to further document the area of seizure onset. From the initial group of 160 potential surgical candidates, 40 patients (20 M, 20 F) with mean age of 31 years (range: 2 months-55 years) and mean duration of uncontrolled seizures of 16 years (range: 2 months-47 years) eventually underwent a surgical procedure. 30/40 patients were on high dose antiepileptic polytherapy. Optimum MR detected structural abnormalities, confined to a limited brain area, in 39 patients. These abnormalities were of space-occupying nature in 21 cases; an atrophic lesion was suspected in 17 patients. Structural abnormalities were most frequently located in the temporal lobe (n = 26) and the frontal lobe (n = 7). Video-EEG monitoring documented complex partial seizures in 32 patients with occasional secondary generalisation in 14. In most of these patients, seizures could be subclassified as being of temporal lobe origin based on clinical and EEG criteria. Two patients had only simple partial seizures. One patient with Sturge-Weber syndrome and a strictly unilateral angioma had hemiconvulsions. A mentally retarded patient with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome had different types of seizures. After non-invasive and invasive exploration, the area of seizure onset could be determined in all patients. Standard or modified temporal lobectomy +/- hippocampectomy were the most commonly performed procedures (n = 26). In 5 patients complete lesionectomies were performed for epileptogenic structural lesions in and outside the temporal lobe. In 2 patients only partial lesionectomies were possible; in 5 patients only biopsies could be performed. Anterior 2/3 callosotomy and hemispherectomy were each performed in one patient. Postsurgical seizure control, after average follow-up of 20 months (range: 6-40 months), was excellent in 27 patients who became seizure-free. In these patients antiepileptic therapy was tapered 2 years after surgery. An additional 4 patients continue to experience non-disabling simple partial seizures only. Patients in whom only biopsies or partial lesionectomies were performed have poor seizure control. Three patients died as a result of the intrinsic malignancy of their space-occupying lesion. Two patients who are seizure free experienced a moderate postoperative hemiparesis with subtotal recovery. Overall quality of life was substantially improved both in patients who became entirely seizure free or who experienced a very significant reduction in seizure frequency. Presurgical evaluation and epilepsy surgery are a labour intensive but rewarding therapeutic alternative for patients with medically refractory epilepsy. Besides providing therapeutic efficacy, comprehensive presurgical evaluation and epilepsy surgery allow for fruitful clinical neurological research.
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PMID:Epilepsy surgery in Belgium, the Flemish experience. 866 30

We describe the case of 47-year-old man with a cystic, melanotic temporal lobe astrocytoma who had a history of complex partial seizures. The tumor mass was made up of two histologically different regions: one consisted of spindle-shaped and pleomorphic cells often with foamy or vacuolated cytoplasm, while the other consisted of fairly uniform spindle-shaped cells, many of which contained dark-brown intracytoplasmic pigment. Desmoplasia was also noted in the latter region of the tumor. No features suggestive of malignancy, such as mitotic figures, necrotic foci or endothelial vascular proliferation, were observed throughout the tumor. Immunohistochemically, the tumor cells in both regions were positive for glial fibrillary acidic protein. Ultrastructural examination of the pigmented region showed the presence of melanosomal melanin in the tumor cells. Apart from the partial pigmentation, the entire histological picture resembled a pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma. To our knowledge, only two cases of similar melanotic astrocytic tumors have been described previously. Interestingly, the astrocytic tumors in both of these patients were also clinically associated with epilepsy, were located in the temporal lobe, and were histologically benign.
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PMID:Melanotic cerebral astrocytoma: case report and literature review. 903 69

We report the case of a 62-year-old man affected by anti-Hu-associated paraneoplastic encephalomyelitis. The underlying tumor was a neuroendocrine cancer of the rectum expressing Hu antigen. The neurologic presentation was limited to moderate sensitive neuropathy associated with two complex partial seizures (dreamy state) without any further signs of limbic encephalopathy. A paraneoplastic etiology should be considered in patients with moderate symptomatology. Paraneoplastic encephalomyelitis with anti-Hu antibodies is not always associated with small-cell lung cancer.
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PMID:[Paraneoplastic encephalomyeloneuritis with anti-Hu antibodies and cancer of the rectum]. 929 26

Two cases of patients with paraneoplastic limbic encephalitis, difficult to control seizures, and unilateral hippocampal hypermetabolism on positron emission tomography (PET) are described. Two women aged 33 and 61 presented with uncontrolled complex partial seizures, profound memory loss and cognitive decline. One was later diagnosed with breast cancer and the other with lung cancer. Video-EEG on the first patient recorded multifocal sharp waves and bilateral independent seizure onsets. The second patient had no epileptiform discharges and bitemporal ictal onset, even though the clinical seizures suggested a right temporal onset. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was normal in both patients. PET scans obtained in the interictal state showed right hippocampal hypermetabolism in both patients. In the second patient, the lung cancer was irradiated with resolution of seizures and improvement of memory function. A PET scan six months later was normal. Subsequent seizure recurrence and worsening of memory led to the discovery of widespread metastases. Limbic encephalitis should be considered in the differential diagnosis of intractable partial epilepsy, particularly if accompanied by severe memory loss and cognitive decline. Treatment of the underlying cancer may be lead to improved seizure control. Hippocampal hypermetabolism may be a common feature on PET, and may indicate subclinical seizure activity.
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PMID:Limbic encephalitis and hyperactive foci on PET scan. 1060 May 85

Two patients with clinically probable or possible limbic encephalitis (LE) are reported, both cases with typical findings in clinical symptoms (severe neuropsychological deficits and complex partial seizures) and in routine magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) (hyperintense mesiotemporal lesions). Underlying malignancy was identified (rectal carcinoma) in one case but could not be detected in the other patient. The 2 patients were investigated by cerebral 18F-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose-positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) and 3-dimensional (3D) MRI, and abnormalities in metabolic activity were mapped using coregistration of spatially normalized PET and MRI. Highly significant focal hypermetabolism in bilateral hippocampal areas was found in both cases. The authors' findings support FDG-PET coregistered to 3D MRI as a potentially valuable additional tool in the imaging diagnostics of LE. Results are discussed with respect to the clinical symptoms and previously reported imaging findings in the disease.
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PMID:Limbic encephalitis investigated by 18FDG-PET and 3D MRI. 1211 50

Primary malignant melanoma of the leptomeninges is a rare and aggressive tumor in children and accounts for less than 1% of all pediatric malignancies. Usually its symptoms include raised intracraneal pressure resulting from hydrocephalus secondary to tumoral obliteration of basal cisterns, but the passage of time from the initial symptomatology to diagnosis is frequently delayed. A 7-year-old male with primary leptomeningeal melanoma is reported. At the beginning, he presented ataxia and dysarthria followed by symptoms of raised intracranial pressure, complex partial seizures, progressive loss of consciousness, and coma. Cerebrospinal fluid analysis demonstrated raised opening pressure, normal glucose, and increased protein concentration, but malignant melanoma cells were not found. Magnetic resonance imaging scans depicted bright signals in the subarachnoid spaces on T(1) images and gadolinium-enhanced focal lesions. Cerebral biopsy was proposed, but it was not authorized. Definitive diagnosis was thus made by pathologic postmortem examination.
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PMID:Primary leptomeningeal melanoma in a child. 1151 18

Because of the vital need to attain cross-cultural comparability of estimates of tobacco use across subgroups of the U.S. population that differ in primary language use, the National Cancer Institute (NCI) Tobacco Use Special Cessation Supplement to the Current Population Survey (TUSCS-CPS) was translated into Spanish, Chinese (Mandarin and Cantonese), Korean, Vietnamese, and Khmer (Cambodian). The questionnaire translations were extensively tested using an eight-step process that focused on both translation procedures and empirical pretesting. The resulting translations are available on the Internet at http://riskfactor.cancer.gov/studies/tus-cps/translation/questionnaires.html for tobacco researchers to use in their own surveys, either in full, or as material to be selected as appropriate. This manuscript provides information to guide researchers in accessing and using the translations, and describes the empirical procedures used to develop and pretest them (cognitive interviewing and behavior coding). We also provide recommendations concerning the further development of questionnaire translations.
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PMID:Translation of a tobacco survey into Spanish and Asian languages: the Tobacco Use Supplement to the Current Population Survey. 1858 71


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