Cases reported "Epilepsies, Partial"

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1/28. Epileptogenic mineralization: pathological variants with good prognosis.

    Four examples of grossly mineralized lesions of the brain, causing seizures, are described; they include 2 hamartomas, a choristoma (novel associations), and an idiopathic "brain stone." Each was detectable with routine roentgenograms, and the seizures were ameliorated by surgical therapy.
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ranking = 1
keywords = hamartoma
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2/28. Stereotactic radiofrequency ablation for the treatment of gelastic seizures associated with hypothalamic hamartoma. Case report.

    The author presents the case of a patient with gelastic seizures associated with a hypothalamic hamartoma, in whom partial resection of the hamartoma followed by temporal lobectomy and orbitofrontal corticectomy failed to reduce the seizures. Subsequent stereotactic radiofrequency ablation of the hamartoma resulted in progressive improvement in the seizure disorder during a 28-month follow-up period. There is support in the literature for the concept that gelastic seizures originate directly from the hamartoma; however, direct surgical approaches to these lesions pose significant risks. It is proposed that the technique of radiofrequency ablation provides a minimally invasive, low-risk approach for the treatment of hypothalamic hamartomas.
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ranking = 9
keywords = hamartoma
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3/28. Utility of early single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) in neonatal gelastic epilepsy associated with hypothalamic hamartoma.

    Gelastic epilepsy, or laughing seizures, is a rare seizure manifestation often associated with hypothalamic hamartoma. This seizure type is well described in older children and adults, but has only rarely been reported in neonates, oftentimes recognized in retrospect when the children are older. We report a child diagnosed at 3 months of age with a large hypothalamic mass after evaluation for spells occurring since birth. The spells were characterized by bursts of hyperpnea, followed by repeated "cooing" respirations, giggling, and smiling. These spells were recognized soon after birth in the delivery room, and occurred at 15-20 minute intervals. They did not interrupt feeding and occurred during sleep. On referral to our center, the patient was noted to be thriving, with normal medical and neurologic examinations except for his spells. The laboratory evaluation was normal, as were endocrine and ophthalmologic evaluations. neuroimaging was performed, with magnetic resonance imaging demonstrating a large 2.8-cm isodense, nonenhancing hypothalamic mass. Electroencephalogram was abnormal, demonstrating bi-frontal sharp and spike-wave discharges. Video-EEG did not demonstrate ictal discharges associated with the patient's spells. Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) demonstrated dramatic ictal uptake in the area of the tumor, with normalization during the interictal phase. Partial excision of hamartomatous tissue has minimally improved the spells. In conclusion, this patient manifested an unusual, early presentation of a rare seizure type. SPECT scanning confirmed the intrinsic epileptogenesis of the hamartoma, further justifying a surgical approach to such patients. Early surgical intervention is probably indicated in an attempt to minimize or prevent the cognitive and behavioral sequelae commonly seen with this seizure type.
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ranking = 7
keywords = hamartoma
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4/28. hemifacial spasm or subcortical epilepsy?

    A child with Goldenhar's syndrome presented at about one week of age with stereotyped, repetitive paroxysmal episodes of hemifacial contraction, suggestive of partial seizures or hemifacial spasm. Later in life he also developed independent, permanent abnormal eye and chin movements identical in rhythm to those seen in myorhythmias, suggesting involvement of the dentato-olivary pathway. MRI demonstrated a hamartomatous lesion at the level of the pontomedullary junction. We speculate that the nature of the lesion could be responsible for the partial seizures mimicking hemifacial spasm and that because of its location, this same lesion could also be implicated in the genesis of myorhythmias. The presence of a hamartomatous lesion in a region affected by the abnormal development of the first and second branchial arches is not fortuitous.
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ranking = 2
keywords = hamartoma
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5/28. Gelastic seizures: video-EEG and scintigraphic analysis of a case with a frontal focus; review of the literature and pathophysiological hypotheses.

    We report scalp EEG and SPECT findings in a young patient who experienced gelastic seizures; clinical, EEG and scintigraphic data strongly suggested a frontal focus in a context of cryptogenic epilepsy. Few cases of gelastic seizures originating in the frontal lobe have been reported in the literature, most of them involving a diencephalic hamartoma or a temporal focus although, no clinical pattern has been found to be specific for each of these three anatomical regions. The ictal laughter is of variable nature, unmotivated or associated with feelings of mirth, forced or natural, except in the case of a frontal focus where the laughter seems consistently described as forced and unmotivated. However, mirth and laughter are two dissociable clinical elements; their genesis probably involves distinct mechanisms. Anatomical considerations lead to several hypotheses concerning laughter generation: it could be a simple reactional behavior in response to a modified cognitive process, an automatic behavior or a forced action. In a few cases with a temporal focus, laughter seems directly related to a disorganization of the associative temporal cortex and may be considered as a reactional behavior. In cases with frontal focus, anterior cingulate and orbital structures would be particularly implicated in laughter genesis, although with possible different pathophysiological routes: in the first case by disconnection within the premotor mesial system or by an imbalance between premotor mesial and premotor lateral systems, and in the second case by activation of a previously conditioned orbital region.
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ranking = 1
keywords = hamartoma
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6/28. Transcallosal resection of hypothalamic hamartomas, with control of seizures, in children with gelastic epilepsy.

    OBJECTIVE: Hypothalamic hamartomas (HHs) are associated with precocious puberty and gelastic epilepsy; the seizures are often refractory to antiepileptic medications and associated with delayed development and disturbed behavior. The current opinion is that surgery to treat intrahypothalamic lesions is formidable and that complete excision is not technically achievable. We report our experience with a transcallosal approach to the resection of HHs. methods: Five children (age, 4-13 yr) with intractable epilepsy and HHs underwent preoperative clinical, electroencephalographic, and imaging evaluations. Two patients experienced only gelastic seizures, and three patients experienced mixed seizure disorders with drop attacks; all experienced multiple daily seizures. patients were evaluated with respect to seizures, cognition, behavior, and endocrine status 9 to 37 months (mean, 24 mo) after surgery. The HHs were approached via a transcallosal-interforniceal route to the third ventricle and were resected using a microsurgical technique and frameless stereotaxy. RESULTS: Complete or nearly complete (>95%) excision of the HHs was achieved for all patients, with no adverse neurological, psychological, or visual sequelae. Two patients experienced mild transient diabetes insipidus after surgery. Two patients developed appetite stimulation, but no other significant endocrinological sequelae were observed. Three patients are seizure-free and two patients have experienced only occasional, brief, mild gelastic seizures after surgery, all with reduced antiepileptic medications. On the basis of parental reports and our own subjective observations, the children also exhibited marked improvements in behavior, school performance, and quality of life. CONCLUSION: Complete or nearly complete resection of HHs can be safely achieved via a transcallosal approach, with the possibility of seizure freedom and neurobehavioral improvements.
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ranking = 5
keywords = hamartoma
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7/28. Gelastic seizures of neocortical origin confirmed by resective surgery.

    Ictal laughter is a relatively unusual phenomenon that appears to arise from within hypothalamic hamartomas. Gelastic seizures of neocortical origin are rare and when reported typically originate from temporofrontal regions in proximity to the hypothalamus, raising the possibility of a subtle lesion in the hypothalamus. A girl with gelastic seizures originating in a dysembryoblastic neuroepithelial tumor at the cranial vertex had resolution of her seizures following surgical resection. Electrical propagation of seizures via the cingulate gyrus appears to be an alternative mechanism underlying gelastic seizures.
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ranking = 1
keywords = hamartoma
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8/28. The use of stereotactic radiosurgery to treat intractable childhood partial epilepsy.

    PURPOSE: Although conventional surgery is presently used to treat seizures of temporolimbic and neocortical origin, deep-seated lesions are often associated with morbidity. Stereotactic radiosurgery is a noninvasive procedure that effectively treats patients with vascular malformations and brain tumors, but its efficacy for epileptogenic foci is limited, especially in children. methods: Between 1995 and 1999, four candidates who had medically uncontrolled seizures and localized seizure foci were selected for stereotactic radiosurgery, with a mean age of 9.75 years at the time of surgery (range, 4-17 years). Seizure foci were identified on the basis of ictal and interictal video-EEG. Magnetic resonance (MR) images were obtained before and after surgery. Ictal single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) was performed by using stabilized hexamethyl-propyleneamine oxime (HMPAO; 300 microcuries/kg) with early injection after electrographic ictal onset. The clinical features of the patients are given. All radiosurgical procedures were performed with the gamma knife unit with the Leksell stereotactic frame, stereotactic MRI imaging, and the Gamma Plan workstation. Seizure outcome was scored according to Engel's classification. RESULTS: Two patients had hypothalamic hamartoma (HH), and two had neocortical epilepsy. At mean follow-up of 39.2 months (range, 26-69 months), two patients were seizure free, one with a HH and one with a suggestive developmental tumor in the insular cortex by MRI findings. The other patient with HH had 90% reduction of seizures. One patient with a widespread seizure focus that involved the motor strip was unimproved. The two patients with HH also exhibited markedly improved neurobehavioral status after surgery. There were no significant complications of radiosurgical therapy. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that gamma knife surgery is a potentially valuable treatment modality for children with medically intractable epilepsy due to a well-localized seizure focus that is difficult to excise by conventional techniques or for whom they are deemed unsuitable. More widespread application in childhood epilepsy should be investigated in larger series.
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ranking = 1
keywords = hamartoma
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9/28. Gelastic seizure with hypothalamic hamartoma: proton magnetic resonance spectrometry and ictal electroencephalographic findings in a 4-year-old girl.

    Gelastic seizure is a rare symptom often associated with hypothalamic hamartoma. We present here a 4-year-old girl with gelastic epilepsy caused by hypothalamic hamartoma and report the magnetic resonance spectrometry and electroencephalographic (EEG) findings. At the age of 2 1/2 years, she developed brief, repetitive laughing attacks or mixed attacks with laughing and crying, which were refractory to carbamazepine. An interictal EEG showed intermittent slow waves in the left frontocentral region and sporadic positive sharp waves in the left centroparietal area. Ictal EEG demonstrated dysrhythmic theta activity in the left central area 3 seconds after the onset of laughing. brain magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated a large sessile mass, isointense to gray matter, in the region of the hypothalamus, suggesting hypothalamic hamartoma. Proton magnetic resonance spectrometry of the hypothalamic hamartoma revealed a significant reduction of the N-acetylaspartate/serum creatinine ratio. The altered chemical shift imaging with magnetic resonance spectrometry in our patient suggests a biochemical abnormality in the tissue of the hypothalamic hamartoma. Moreover, this abnormal function of the hamartoma tissue might be closely related to epileptogenesis because the time difference between the ictal laughter and the subsequent EEG changes in the ictal EEG does not support the idea that the activated cortex is the epileptogenic focus.
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ranking = 10
keywords = hamartoma
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10/28. Gelastic seizures and low-grade hypothalamic astrocytoma: a case report.

    The typical, well recognized childhood epilepsy syndrome caused by hypothalamic hamartoma is characterized by early-onset, stereotyped attacks of uncontrollable laughter, frequent refractory seizures with progressive cognitive deterioration and severe behavioral problems. Here, we report a 17-year-old patient with gelastic phenomenon started in the neonatal period, later on associated with drug resistant polymorphic seizures, intellectual deficit and behavioral disorders, who improved by partial resection of an expected hypothalamic hamartoma that, in turn, resulted to be a hypothalamic low-grade astrocytoma.
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ranking = 2
keywords = hamartoma
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