Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0149958 (complex partial seizures)
2,563 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We report a case of successful radiosurgical treatment of lesional epilepsy of mesial temporal origin. A patient presented with a 2-year history of medically intractable complex partial seizures associated with a mesial temporal angioma. Interictal scalp EEG and MEG showed focal epileptiform activity around the lesion. 99mTc-HMPAO-SPECT and 18F-FDG-PET demonstrated depressed blood flow and glucose metabolism in the corresponding temporal lobe. The patient underwent gamma knife radiosurgery for the causative lesion with a low marginal dose of 18 Gy. After treatment, the partial attack ceased without shrinkage of the lesion or peri-lesional parenchymal radiation injury.
...
PMID:Successful radiosurgical treatment of lesional epilepsy of mesial temporal origin. 1140 11

Goose flesh and cold shiver can be ictal signs of visceral epilepsies. These visceral epilepsies may occur with isolated ictal signs during a simple partial seizure or in combination with other autonomic signs or in complex partial seizures. Because of the unusual features of the ictal symptomatology, these visceral epilepsies often are masked and wrongly diagnosed as nonepileptic events, e.g., somatoform disorders. Five cases are reported with case history, neurological findings, and results of electroencephalography, MEG, and imaging. Interestingly, patients did not suffer from tumoral epilepsies and the epileptic focus was lateralized to the left (dominant) temporal lobe.
...
PMID:[Goose flesh and cold sensation. Symptoms of visceral epilepsy]. 1197 98

A 26-year-old right-handed woman, with a history of left temporal lobe contusion caused by a fall at the age of 9 months, started to have complex partial seizures with oral automatism at the age of 7 years. The seizures occurred once or twice a month despite combination therapy with several antiepileptic agents. Her history and imaging studies suggested the diagnosis of epilepsy arising from traumatic neocortical temporal lesion. Comprehensive assessment including long-term video EEG monitoring, MRI, FDG-PET, MEG, and neuropsychological evaluation was performed at the age of 26 years. The diagnosis was left mesial temporal lobe epilepsy associated with hippocampal atrophy and traumatic temporal cortical lesion. The patient was readmitted for surgical treatment at the age of 27 years. Intracranial EEG monitoring showed that ictal discharges started in the left hippocampus and spread to the traumatic lesion in the left posterior superior temporal gyrus 10 seconds after the onset. This case could not be classified as dual pathology exactly, because the traumatic left temporal cortical lesion did not show independent epileptogenicity. However, the traumatic lesion was highly likely to be the source of the epileptogenicity, and she had right hemispheric dominance for language and functional deterioration in the whole temporal cortex. Therefore, left amygdalo-hippocampectomy and left temporal lobectomy including the traumatic lesion were performed according to the diagnosis of dual pathology. Subsequently, she remained seizure-free for 3 years. Comprehensive assessment of seizure semiology, neurophysiology, neuroradiology, and neuropsychology is important to determine the optimum therapeutic strategies for drug-resistant epilepsy.
...
PMID:[A surgical case of mesial temporal lobe epilepsy associated with hippocampal sclerosis and traumatic neocortical lesion]. 2907 Jul 52