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)

Two cases of discontinuous status epilepticus (SE) characterized by repetitive asymmetrical atonic episodes associated with diffuse but asymmetrical spike waves are reported. Both patients also had partial seizures and interictal rolandic discharges. Dynamic EEG topography was performed to investigate the location or propagation of each ictal discharge overlying the scalp during status and showed immediate bilateral spread of discharges originating from a primary epileptogenic focus from a rolandic area.
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PMID:Status epilepticus characterized by repetitive asymmetrical atonia: two cases accompanied by partial seizures. 211

Next to tonic-clonic seizures psychomotor (complex focal) seizures are the most common form of all epileptic seizures, except in infancy where they are seen rarely. Differently from generalised non convulsive seizures (like petit mal absences), their first appearance has no typical age limit, however, their proportion to other forms of seizures increases in adolescence and adults especially between the third and fifth decade of life. The main symptom is the disorder of consciousness which lasts at least more than half a minute, normally several minutes in completely distinct seizures, which doesn't begin abruptly and which often ends ill defined. This twilight attack is proceeded by an aura of sensory, psychic or vegetative character. The aura is followed either by a transitory state of immobility and later by motor phenomena or at once by motor phenomena in the form of diverse automatisms of variable intensity, reaching from mild movements in the oral region over verbal expressions to highly dramatic scenes, often accompanied by vegetative symptoms. Tonic versive and tonic symmetrical or tonic asymmetrical seizure symptoms are quite often motor variants which also can lead to sudden drops. Psychomotor attacks can be reduced to "pseudo-absences", however, they also can develop into tonic-clonic seizures (Grand mal). Generally, the succession of seizure symptoms is constant in the same patient, the expression can differ from seizure to seizure. Psychomotor attacks can be spread over the whole day or can show a strict connection to sleep, in the course they can likely occur in clusters and can accumulate to a continuous or discontinuous form of psychomotor status epilepticus. Predominantly, but not exclusively psychomotor attacks start from the temporal lobe, whereas neocortical temporal attacks (especially of lateral posterior origin) can be distinguished from those coming from the limbic system, especially from hippocampal or mesio-basal temporal structures and from the nucleus amygdalae. About 20% of the psychomotor attacks are of frontal origin coming from the mesial frontal region or from the gyrus cinguli anterior. Also seizures of occipital or parietal origin can spread so quickly that the seizure itself is impressing as a "temporal lobe attack". On account of that, epilepsies with psychomotor attacks cannot be compared to temporal lobe epilepsies. The etiology of psychomotor epilepsies is closely connected to the topographic site of the temporal lobe, who is especially vulnerable for traumatic lesions, cerebral edema and hypoxemia. Also small dysgeneses, heterotopies or small abnormalities of vessels are relatively often found in surgical specimens.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[Psychomotor epilepsy: phenomenology, localization, pathogenesis and therapy]. 219 20

The effects of macular and peripheral retina coagulation were examined in photosensitive baboons, Papio papio (PP), with or without forebrain bisection. The temporal part of the macula and surrounding retina of the left eye were coagulated with an Argon laser and later confirmed histologically. In forebrain nonbisected baboons, intermittent light stimulation of the operated eye produced bisymmetrical and bisynchronous spikes and waves and self-sustained seizures. In forebrain-bisected baboons intermittent light stimulation of the operated eye produced spikes and waves and self-sustained seizures localized to the contralateral hemisphere. Subsequent stimulation of the nonoperated eye in the same animal produced spikes and waves and seizures either bilaterally or only in the opposite hemisphere when stimulation took place during the postictal silent period in the first hemisphere. In both cases, the tonic phase of the seizure was always bilateral but asymmetrical as shown by electromyographic recordings. Based on these data, it has been hypothesized that the tonic phase is mediated, in part, through crossed interreticular pathways, by one or both cerebral hemispheres. However, data are also compatible with a possible origin of the tonic phase of the seizure being partly localized in the medial frontal cortex. Results demonstrated (1) the usefulness of laser coagulation of the temporal portion of the macula and retina for the study of the functional independence between two cerebral hemispheres, (2) the critical role of the corpus callosum (CC) in bisynchronization and generalization of the intermittent light stimulation (ILS)-induced seizure, (3) independent excitability of each cerebral hemisphere by the ILS, and (4) the critical role of cortical visual afferents for inducing epileptic phenomena in this species.
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PMID:Effect of macular and peripheral retina coagulation on photosensitive epilepsy in the forebrain bisected baboon, Papio papio. 250 8

There is controversy in the literature regarding the prognostic value of the EEG following neonatal seizures. This report reviews the results of a prospective study comparing EEG findings and outcome in 74 term and preterm infants following neonatal seizures. EEGs were evaluated for both background rhythms and epileptiform activity. Outcome was evaluated at an average age of 33 months. Background rhythms were highly correlated with outcome. Low voltage, electrocerebral inactivity and burst suppression EEGs were associated with poor outcomes while normal EEGs were associated with favorable outcomes. Slow, maturationally delayed and asymmetrical EEGs were associated with variable outcomes. The presence of epileptiform activity on the EEG was correlated with adverse outcomes but was not as highly significant as background rhythms. Electroencephalographic seizures, whether associated with clinical manifestations or not, were highly correlated with poor outcomes. The significance of these EEG findings was similar in both term and preterm infants. The study demonstrates that the EEG is predictive of outcome following neonatal seizures.
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PMID:Prognostic value of the electroencephalogram in term and preterm infants following neonatal seizures. 257 26

Two Senegalese baboons (Papio papio) were subjected to daily electrical stimulation at the SMA. When compared with the results of kindling at different frontal cortical sites, ADT and GST at the SMA were lower than those at other sites. On the other hand, the number of stimulations required for Stage 4 asymmetrical generalization was much greater at the SMA (mean of 78.0) than that for the PMA (22.5). These findings suggest that partial seizure originating from the PMA rather than the SMA seems to have a better access to the mechanisms underlying secondarily generalized convulsive seizure despite exquisite susceptibility to AD generation at the latter.
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PMID:Supplementary motor area kindling in the photosensitive baboons. 262 2

The authors retrospectively studied the electroencephalograms (EEGs) of 12 patients with hemimegalencephaly-a unilateral brain malformation which is often overlooked, despite having typical CT-scan and MRI aspects. They were characterized by three types of abnormal tracing, which correlated with prognosis: triphasic complexes of large amplitude were observed in patients with the earliest onset of seizures, and were associated with the most severe prognosis; unilateral, rhythmic 'alpha-like' activity was recorded in patients with seizures occurring after three months of age, and was associated with a relatively favourable outcome; asymmetrical suppression-bursts characterised by 'alpha-like' activity on the abnormal side were seen in patients with infantile spasms. The EEG pattern seems to make an important contribution to both diagnosis and prognosis.
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PMID:Electroencephalographic aspects of hemimegalencephaly. 259 76

The case of a 7-year-old girl, born from a monochorionic biamniotic pregnancy (with healthy male twin) is presented. The patient showed a congenital brown-yellowish, raised, rough and oval-shaped nevic neoformation of the right temporo-zygomatic region. At 28 days of age she had a right hemiclonic status epilepticus, and from the 8th month of life she presented right sided partial motor seizures. Moreover from the beginning, her development milestones were delayed. When she was 5 years old an electroencephalogram displayed a sharp asymmetrical background activity, a continuous paroxysmal activity on the right hemisphere and independent focal irritative anomalies on the left posterior region. Her computed tomographic scan demonstrated megalencephaly on the right hemisphere. A biopsy specimen of her skin lesion showed the histological characteristics of a nevus sebaceous of Jadassohn. Taken together the clinical, neuroradiological and dermatological data led to the diagnosis of linear nevus sebaceous syndrome.
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PMID:[Sebaceous linear nevus syndrome with hemimegalencephaly. Report of a case]. 276 20

Lateralization of the epileptic process in a group of 152 subjects and the relationship of epilepsy to the lateralization of brain functions was studied in smaller groups of 108 and 56 subjects. A unilateral epileptic process in the temporal limbic structures of the brain is localized in the left half of the brain twice (in 64.5%) to four times (in 80.8%) as often as in the right half. The greater the asymmetry of physiological brain functions--in particular motor and verbally symbolic functions--the more is this tendency pronounced. An epileptic process in temporal limbic structures of the left half of the brain is manifested more often in primarily generalized epileptic seizures with initial sudden and complete loss of consciousness. Episodic spike-and-wave activity, which is the typical electroencephalographic correlate of primarily generalized seizures, or of the thalamocortical aetiopathogenetic component of the epileptic process, is often asymmetrical in amplitude, which in 68.1% of these cases is twice as high over the left hemisphere. An epileptic process in subcortical structures of the right hemisphere impairs physiological asymmetry of emotive facial mimicry (with preponderance of mimic reactions on the left) and in 68.4% of the cases causes atypical preponderance of emotive mimicry in the right half of the face. A unilateral epileptic process in subcortical structures of the left half of the brain has a more favourable course and more hopeful prognosis in 70.4% of the cases, while the course of a right-sided process is worse in 67.6%.
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PMID:Physiological asymmetry of brain functions--its influence on the lateralization, symptomatology and course of the epileptic process. 294 6

A 9-year old country boy developed blepharitis with inflammation of the face and, 1 month later, eosinophilic meningitis with paralysis of 3 limbs and of an abducent nerve. Nuclear magnetic resonance imaging of the central nervous system disclosed a lesional signal beneath the floor of the 4th ventricle, which was compatible with the presence of a larva of fly. Treatment with thiabendazole was tried, and the clinical signs regressed. Six months later, an asymmetrical hydrocephalus due to obstruction of Monroe's foramen by an inflammatory granuloma was discovered. Human hypodermyasis, due to migration in tissues of larvae of flies, is not rare in cattle-breeding areas. Neuromeningeal disorders are observed in 12% of the cases, consisting of eosinophilic meningitis sometimes associated with neurological deficit or seizures. Such complications as intracerebral haematoma or meningeal haemorrhage may occur during the usually benign course of the disease.
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PMID:[Neuromeningeal hypodermyiasis complicated by hydrocephaly. Value of nuclear magnetic resonance imaging]. 295 74

Based on the clinicoelectrographic data of 28 patients (14 children and 14 adults) with absence status epilepticus thoroughly documented by CCTV/EEG, it was found that there were significant differences between the children and adults. In childhood, absence status tended to occur in those who had experienced individual short-lived atypical absence seizures and also other types of generalized seizure. In contrast, there was a general tendency for absence status in adulthood to occur in females without individual absence seizure. With respect to the clinicoelectrographical manifestations, absence status with a decreased postural tone was prone to be associated with a more profound clouding of consciousness, whereas in those with myoclonic components there was a less profound clouding. The former was found solely in children while the latter was both in children and in adults. During absence status, the focal motor features with or without secondarily generalized convulsions were observed in 8 adult patients (57%). On the other hand, no focal motor manifestations were observed during absence status in children. Absence status is composed of two modalities: either a prolongation or repetition of absence seizures. It was demonstrated that, in children, either the prolongation or repetition of individual absence seizures developed into absence status. The short-lived absence was of an atypical nature, whereas in adults, absence status consisted of the prolongation of an absence seizure which occurred in patients with no experience of individual absence seizures. With respect to the drug treatment, antiabsence drugs had some effect in children, while none of the adult patients responded either to the antiabsence drugs or other antiepileptic drugs. The long-term seizure prognosis was not necessarily poor in children but invariably poor in adults. Four adult patients showed diffuse, but unilateral frontally accentuated asymmetrical paroxysmal activity during the status. Three of them showed initial localized spike-wave discharges in the unilateral frontal region followed by a generalized spike-wave rhythm. Furthermore, all of these 4 patients with focally accentuated ictal EEGs have shown partial motor seizures intermingled with absence status.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:A comparative study of absence status epilepticus between children and adults. 324 75


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