Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P50583 (asymmetrical)
12,197 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Epileptic seizures are more frequent in the neonate than at any other time. The incidence of neonatal seizures (NNS) is estimated to be between 1.5 and 5.5/1000 living births, its onset being during the first week in 80% of cases. Mortality rate remains very high (20-45%). Not all paroxysmal manifestations are epileptic, and differential diagnosis remains an important challenge. Neonates may present with different types of seizures: clonic, tonic, myoclonic (axial, focal, erratic), epileptic spasms, and subtle seizures, including autonomic signs or automatisms. The main etiology is hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (40-45%) with a very early onset, and variable semiology including all seizure types. An EEG is necessary to recognize the seizures, and interictal tracing may help in assessing prognosis. Ischemic stroke is associated with seizures of early onset, being focal or unilateral. Interictal EEG is asymmetrical, with focal or unilateral patterns. Other etiologies less often linked to epileptic seizures must be looked for such as brain infection, metabolic disorders, chromosomal abnormalities, inborn errors of metabolism, brain malformations, and vitamin B6 dependency. Neonatal epilepsy syndromes may have favorable (benign familial neonatal seizures) or poor (early infantile encephalopathy with epilepsy, early myoclonic encephalopathy, and migrating partial seizures in infancy) prognosis.
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PMID:Neonatal seizures. 2362 96

Painless aortic dissections in general are uncommon and are frequently misdiagnosed. Here we reported a rare case of acute ischemic stroke secondary to completely painless acute full-length dissection (DeBakey I) and provide a brief review of the literature. A 56-year-old man was referred to our department with right hemiplegia. Ischaemic stroke and thrombolytic treatment were considered initially. At the second examination, the patient was found to have decreased blood pressure, asymmetrical blood pressure/pulses between the bilateral limbs, and sudden loss of pulse in a lower extremity. Laboratory results revealed leucocytosis, elevated creatinine and CK without obvious cause. An aortic dissection was subsequently confirmed by contrast enhanced thoracic and abdominal CT scan. Our report provides some clues for the early diagnosis of painless aortic dissections.
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PMID:Unexpected cause of a right hemiplegia secondary to the painless full-length aortic dissection: a case report and literature review. 2593 76