Cases reported "Hyperkinesis"

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1/13. Probable neonatal propoxyphene withdrawal: a case report.

    A baby with neonatal withdrawal from propoxyphene as evidenced by severe diarrhea, flapping tremors, shrill cry, diaphoresis, hypertonicity, and seizures is presented. Propoxyphene and its metabolites were identified in the patient's serum and urine. We express concern about the wide use of propoxyphene and its proposed use in substitution programs for detoxifying and maintaining heroin addicts in view of the possibility of neonatal complications.
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ranking = 1
keywords = seizure
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2/13. Malignant McLeod myopathy.

    Mild myopathy is a common manifestation of the X-linked McLeod neuroacanthocytosis syndrome. We present a patient with McLeod syndrome and a primarily subclinical myopathy, who developed severe rhabdomyolysis with renal insufficiency after a prolonged period of excessive motor restlessness due to an agitated psychotic state and a single dose of clozapine. Other possible causes for rhabdomyolysis such as prolonged immobility, trauma, hyperthermia, generalized seizures, toxin exposure, or metabolic changes were excluded. Clinical course was favorable, with persistent slight elevation of serum creatine kinase levels caused by the underlying myopathy. Our findings suggest that McLeod myopathy is a predisposing factor for severe rhabdomyolysis. This possibly life-threatening condition should be added to the clinical spectrum of McLeod syndrome, and serum creatine kinase levels should be carefully monitored in patients with this syndrome, particularly if a hyperkinetic movement disorder is present or neuroleptic medication is used.
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ranking = 1
keywords = seizure
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3/13. thyroxine-induced hypermotor seizure.

    thyroxine-induced epilepsy is a very rare condition occurring in epileptic patients. Here we report a boy with thyroxine-induced hypermotor seizure (HMS) following thyroxine administration for his central hypothyroidism secondary to surgery and cranial radiation for his brain tumor. After 3 years seizure-free period, he had repeated HMS, seven to eight attacks per day, after initiation L-thyroxine treatment. Following reduction of the daily thyroxine dose, his seizures decreased in frequency. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of HMS associated with L-thyroxine administration.
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ranking = 12.848474945776
keywords = epilepsy, seizure, epileptic
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4/13. A nonsense mutation of the sodium channel gene SCN2A in a patient with intractable epilepsy and mental decline.

    Mutations, exclusively missense, of voltage-gated sodium channel alpha subunit type 1 (SCN1A) and type 2 (SCN2A) genes were reported in patients with idiopathic epilepsy: generalized epilepsy with febrile seizures plus. Nonsense and frameshift mutations of SCN1A, by contrast, were identified in intractable epilepsy: severe myoclonic epilepsy in infancy (SMEI). Here we describe a first nonsense mutation of SCN2A in a patient with intractable epilepsy and severe mental decline. The phenotype is similar to SMEI but distinct because of partial epilepsy, delayed onset (1 year 7 months), and absence of temperature sensitivity. A mutational analysis revealed that the patient had a heterozygous de novo nonsense mutation R102X of SCN2A. Patch-clamp analysis of Na(v)1.2 wild-type channels and the R102X mutant protein coexpressed in human embryonic kidney 293 cells showed that the truncated mutant protein shifted the voltage dependence of inactivation of wild-type channels in the hyperpolarizing direction. Analysis of the subcellular localization of R102X truncated protein suggested that its dominant negative effect could arise from direct or indirect cytoskeletal interactions of the mutant protein. haploinsufficiency of Na(v)1.2 protein is one plausible explanation for the pathology of this patient; however, our biophysical findings suggest that the R102X truncated protein exerts a dominant negative effect leading to the patient's intractable epilepsy.
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ranking = 55.826199912323
keywords = epilepsy, seizure
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5/13. Unusual compulsive motor activity during treatment with clothiapine in a mentally retarded adolescent.

    Atypical antipsychotic agents, specifically those with a high hyposerotonergic activity such as clozapine and clothiapine, have been associated with de novo obsessive-compulsive symptoms. We report the case of a 16-year-old adolescent male with severe mental impairment and disruptive behaviour who developed a compulsive head and body turning disorder on clothiapine. Such a symptom had to be distinguished from epileptic partial seizures; it promptly disappeared with the drug discontinuation.
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ranking = 1.8642749537471
keywords = seizure, epileptic
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6/13. Unusual ipsilateral hyperkinetic automatisms in SMA seizures.

    PURPOSE: To describe repetitive movements of the right arm possibly originating from the ipsilateral SMA area in two drug-resistant epileptic patients. methods: Two epileptic patients (one female, one male, 35 and 36 years old, respectively) were submitted to pre-surgical evaluation including history, neurological examination, long-term video-EEG monitoring, interictal and ictal SPET, MRI and fMRI, neuropsychological assessment. Invasive recordings (stereoelectroencephalography) were also performed. RESULTS: In both patients ictal semiology was characterized by very stereotyped repetitive right arm movements, i.e. tapping towards the thorax (movement rate of 6-7 Hz and 3-4 Hz for the two subjects, respectively). seizures in the first patient, whose epilepsy was cryptogenetic, originated from the right pre-SMA area, which was surgically removed. She is seizure free 2 years after the operation. In the second patient, in whom a right pre-frontal post-abscess porencephaly was disclosed, the epileptogenic zone included the lesion and surrounding areas, while the SMA area was involved less consistently. CONCLUSIONS: Even if, according to literature, SMA epilepsy is predominantly characterized by postural manifestations, ipsilateral repetitive movements could be a relevant sign in this kind of epilepsy, as showed in our first patient. The presence of similar semiology in the second patient, might suggest that the symptomatogenic zone involved SMA area.
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ranking = 21.681149883582
keywords = epilepsy, seizure, epileptic
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7/13. seizures presenting as apnoea.

    Between the ages of 3 and 6 months a baby boy presented with repeated, non-specific episodes of cyanosis, apnoea, bradycardia, and abnormal movements of the limbs. The episodes were severe and required resuscitation and several admissions to hospital. Initial investigations showed only signs of oesophagitis. Despite treatment of the oesophagitis the symptoms recurred, and electroencephalography and polygraphy eventually showed evidence of minor seizures. Severe epilepsy with tonic-clonic seizures developed when he was 6 months old.
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ranking = 6.9841999920294
keywords = epilepsy, seizure
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8/13. Transient hyperkinesia after a single intravenous perfusion of diphenylhydantoin. Report of a case associated with nontoxic plasma levels of diphenylhydantoin.

    Transient hyperkinesia was observed in a 16-year-old epileptic and mentally retarded patient after a single intravenous perfusion of diphenylhydantoin (DPH). No clinical signs of DPH intoxication were associated with the movement disorder. Repeated plasma anticonvulsant level determinations never showed toxic concentrations of DPH. Since a few spontaneous episodes of hyperkinesia had been observed before, the DPH intravenous perfusion could have unmasked a preexisting latent movement disorder in our patient. However, neuroradiological investigations failed to demonstrate the existence of any anatomical damage of the basal ganglia, and HVA as well as 5-HIAA levels measured in the CSF with the probenecid technique were within the normal range 2 months after cessation of hyperkinesia. HVA and 5-HIAA levels have also been measured in the CSF during the period with hyperkinesia; the results are discussed with reference to previously published data concerning cerebral monoamine metabolism in drug-treated epileptic patients.
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ranking = 1.7285499074942
keywords = epileptic
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9/13. Effects of the Feingold diet on seizures and hyperactivity: a single-subject analysis.

    The effects of a dietary manipulation on seizure frequency and activity level of a 3 1/2-year-old male with tuberous sclerosis, mental retardation, and uncontrolled seizures were assessed. Using a reversal design, the Feingold (K-P) diet was presented and withdrawn three times, while the medication regimen remained unaltered. Every application of the K-P diet resulted in substantial reductions in seizure frequency. During a 21-week follow-up, seizure frequency remained low despite the phasing out of one drug, and seizures were reportedly eliminated 1 year later. Brief objective measures of hyperactivity failed to show any effect due to the diet changes.
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ranking = 9
keywords = seizure
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10/13. A case report of an autistic girl with an extra bisatellited marker chromosome.

    Cytogenetic examination of a 14-year-old severely retarded girl revealed a karyotype of 47 chromosomes with an extra bisatellited chromosome, a translocation between No. 22 and a chromosome in the D group. The girl had presented an early autistic syndrome beginning about 6 months of age during plastering for a congenital luxation of the hips and receding from the age of 5. In addition, she was hyperkinetic with various aggressive and auto-aggressive traits and had atypical minor epileptic fits. Data from child psychiatric examinations at 5 and 14 years are presented. The importance of giving parents information as early as possible about biological causes of mental retardation and mental illness is stressed.
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ranking = 0.86427495374712
keywords = epileptic
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