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

Quantitative measurements have indicated that heredity, cerebral damage, psycho-social aspects, ictal and inter-ictal phenomena and antiepileptic drugs may interfere in the cognitive dysfunction of epileptic patients. In the present study objective methods included immediate and late recall and recognition of pictures, Stroop test and auditory selection. Twenty patients with symptomatic localized epilepsy aged 17-52 years (27 +/- 10, mean +/- sd) were compared to age and socially matched healthy controls. Patients were on therapeutic serum concentrations (25 +/- 12 mu/ml) of phenobarbitone and had active epilepsy with 1.94 generalized tonic-clonic, 0.85 simple partial and 6.28 complex partial seizures monthly (means). Patients performed worse than controls in all 6 tests (p less than 0.05 to p less than 0.001), indicating a generalized cognitive deficit related to seizures and/or barbiturate therapy. We suggest further studies should be carried out in populations with uniform monotherapeutic regimens and epileptic syndromes in order to isolate factors related to the cognitive dysfunction of epileptic patients.
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PMID:Cognitive functions of epileptic patients on monotherapy with phenobarbitone and healthy controls. 181 Feb 28

A 16-year-old patient who had a history of complex partial seizures, had frequent episodes of status epilepticus with diffuse slow-wave discharges. The clinical manifestations were apparently insignificant due to the fact that vigilance, orientation and behaviour were unimpaired. Neuropsychological investigations showed that the cognitive processes were selectively impaired during such episodes. The electroclinical pattern was interrupted by break-off of contact concomitant with high-frequency spike discharges. Cognitive impairment is believed to represent the specific feature peculiar to this type of status epilepticus.
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PMID:Status epilepticus with cognitive symptomatology in a patient with partial complex epilepsy. 727 12

A chemistry student was acutely exposed to vapors of an organotin compound. Seventy-two hours later, he exhibited delirium, spatial disorientation, perseveration, inappropriate affect, and memory defects. Five months later, he experienced episodes of complex partial seizures, which continue to require anticonvulsant medication after 7 years. Trimethyltin was identified in blood and urine samples taken 17 days after the accident; the blood level of trimethyltin was elevated 35 days after exposure. Serial electroencephalograms showed persistent left temporal paroxysmal epileptogenic potentials. Serial neuropsychological tests revealed persistent memory defects, cognitive dysfunction, and dysphoria 4 years after exposure. We review acute, resolving, and long-term residual neurotoxic effects of trimethyltin in man. We describe detailed clinical observations, serial neuropsychological test results, electroencephalographic findings, and exposure data in this patient, confirming the limbic system effects of trimethyltin and relating them to the known histopathologic pattern of this condition.
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PMID:Trimethyltin encephalopathy. 825 10

OBJECTIVE--To examine patterns of temporal and extratemporal regional interictal glucose hypometabolism in individual patients with unilateral mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE). Previous reports disagree on which extratemporal areas can be hypometabolic in TLE. DESIGN--Case series of patients with TLE who underwent interictal fludeoxyglucose F 18 positron emission tomography, compared quantitatively with normal positron emission tomography. SETTING--Patients referred for surgical treatment of medically refractory complex partial seizures. PATIENTS AND OTHER PARTICIPANTS--Ten normal volunteers; 27 patients with TLE selected to exclude seizures of bilateral temporal or extratemporal onset. RESULTS--Regional hypometabolism occurred in 25 patients. Hypometabolic regions were ipsilateral to seizure onset and included lateral temporal (in 78% of patients), mesial temporal (70%), thalamic (63%), basal ganglial (41%), frontal (30%), parietal (26%), and occipital (4%). Specific patterns of temporal and extratemporal hypometabolism varied considerably across the TLE group. CONCLUSIONS--Any of the previously reported anatomic areas of hypometabolism can occur in individual patients with TLE. The prevalence of thalamic hypometabolism suggests a pathophysiologic role for the thalamus in initiation or propagation of temporal lobe seizures or in the interictal cognitive dysfunction of TLE.
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PMID:Interictal metabolic anatomy of mesial temporal lobe epilepsy. 850 94

We report a 6-year-old girl with Japanese B encephalitis. The initial symptoms were high fever, headache and vomiting. On the second day of illness, she developed hemiconvulsion and was admitted to our hospital. Physical examination demonstrated a stiff neck. C-reactive protein elevated to 22.7 mg/dl. CSF examination showed a marked increase in the cell count (10,896/3 mm3). During the course of the treatment, she showed transient hemiparesis and dysphagia, followed by akinetic mutism lasting for about a month. The patient was left with severe cognitive and memory impairment and complex partial seizures but no motor dysfunction. Japanese B encephalitis was diagnosed by means of serological examination. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed cystic lesions in the medial and posterior thalamus and substantia nigra and severe atrophy of the hippocampus. Despite the involvement of substantia nigra, the patient had no parkinsonism. The cognitive impairment may in part be explained by the lesions in the medical and posterior thalamus.
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PMID:[A case of Japanese B encephalitis with lesions of thalamus and substantia nigra revealed by MRI]. 969 26

Neuropsychological and behavioral status were examined in 57 children aged 7 to 16 years with complex partial seizures (CPS) and compared with 27 sibling control children of the same age. Epilepsy had a significant effect on both cognitive and behavioral adjustment measures. Children with CPS had significant impairment across all seven cognitive domains assessed, reflective of a profile of relatively diffuse and generalized cognitive dysfunction. Age at onset of recurrent seizures was the strongest and most consistent predictor of adequacy of cognitive functioning; earlier age at onset was associated with poorer cognitive status. Children with CPS also had more problems compared with sibling control children on measures of social and school competence and internalizing behavior problems, but not externalizing behaviors. Further, frequency of seizure activity in the past year, rather than age at seizure onset, emerged as the strongest predictor of these behavioral difficulties. These findings are discussed in the context of understanding the impact of CPS on cognition and behavioral adjustment, and identifying the contribution of various aspects of the neurodevelopmental course of CPS to these issues.
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PMID:Neuropsychological and behavioral status of children with complex partial seizures. 1057 35

This study surveyed the perceptions about and subjective experience of 1023 people with epilepsy in two community-based samples: one from a national postal survey; the other callers to the Epilepsy Foundation. Response to a mail survey was 49%. In comparison with US Census Bureau norms, respondents had received less education, were less likely to be employed or married, and came from lower income households. Complex partial seizures were the most prevalent seizure type, but a convulsion had occurred in 61%. Fifty percent of respondents reported incomplete control of their seizure disorder, although 25% of these had a seizure in the prior year. Thirteen percent had a longest inter-seizure interval of a year or greater, 37% of 3 months, 22% of 1 month, 10% of 1 week and 4% of 1 day. Respondents listed uncertainty and fear of having a seizure as the worst thing about having epilepsy. Lifestyle, school, driving, and employment limits were also listed as major problems. When asked to rank a list of potential problems, cognitive impairment was ranked highest. These data indicate that ongoing medical and psychosocial problems continue for those with epilepsy in the view of those questioned and their families, even in a sample where the majority report good control of their epilepsy.
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PMID:The impact of epilepsy from the patient's perspective I. Descriptions and subjective perceptions. 1092 67

The current study was performed to determine possible gender differences among risk factors for suicidal behavior in epilepsy. A special rating scale for assessment of suicidality was designed. The risk of suicide attempt was higher in epilepsy with concomitant diagnoses of organic affective disorder (F=06.3, ICD-10) and cognitive impairment (F=07.62, ICD-10). Risk was higher among females than males. Early age of epilepsy onset and high frequency of secondary generalized, simple partial, and all seizures were risk factors for suicidality in males, whereas low frequency of complex partial seizures was the risk factor in females. Daily dose of a classic antiepileptic drug was a risk factor for males, whereas daily dose of phenobarbital was a risk factor for both genders. Daily dose of carbamazepine and valproate is inversely correlated with suicidal behaviour in women, but not in men. The results obtained are discussed in the context of a paradigm of gender dimorphism as an indicator of evolution of Homo sapiens.
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PMID:Gender differences in risk factors of suicidal behavior in epilepsy. 1582 Mar 53

Dementia is affecting an increasing proportion of the population in the developed world. It is important to reach a correct diagnosis of dementia, because this has implications on the treatment. The electroencephalogram (EEG) is, in general, not a sensitive test for detecting dementia and is not recommended in the standard workup of dementia. In spite of this, however, EEG is useful in patients with deteriorating mental status in whom dementia is suspected mainly to rule out delirium, depression, atypical complex partial seizures, and prion disease. An EEG also provides insight into the physiology of different dementia types. The EEG is most useful when interpreted within a well-defined clinical context, such as knowing the patient's degree of cognitive impairment. It is a noninvasive and inexpensive test, and the threshold should be low for ordering it. This article summarizes EEG findings with aging, different dementia types, and conditions masked as dementia.
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PMID:Electroencephalogram in the dementia workup. 1600 31

Frequent refractory seizures may cause cognitive deterioration when they present at an early age, especially in infants. The findings of previous studies designed to examine the impact of repetitive seizures on cognition in adolescents and adults, however, have shown wide variation. We analyzed the data of neuropsychological evaluations of patients before they underwent temporal lobe resection because of refractory seizure disorder in our institution from 1998 to 2001. Forty-four consecutive patients aged 12-48 years underwent a comprehensive neuropsychological evaluation that included a battery of selected visual and verbal memory tests. Statistical analysis revealed no significant correlation between disease-related parameters, such as age of onset, duration of active disease, estimated cumulative number of complex partial seizures and secondarily generalized seizures, and the results of neuropsychological tests. These findings support the hypothesis that factors other than repetitive seizures are responsible for cognitive dysfunction among adolescents and adults.
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PMID:Is there any correlation between severity of epilepsy and cognitive abilities in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy? 1649 42


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