In this report 17 patients with long-standing non-focal epilepsy underwent callosotomy (this was total in two patients and performed in two stages, and anterior-subtotal in the remaining patients). In all patients the atonic-hypertonic seizures with sudden falls were the most disabling epileptic fits. Callosotomy proved efficient in controlling atonic fits in 10 out of 15 patients in whom surgical results are evaluated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecent papers underline the possible involvement of the central nervous system when an acquired peripheral demyelinating disease occurs and vice-versa. We describe five patients with chronic polyneuropathy and "benign" gammopathy, monoclonal (IgM-K, IgA-k, IgG-k) in three cases and polyclonal (IgG, IgM) in two cases; the monoclonal gammopathies were detected in cases of peripheral nerve disease. Three patients showed tremor and signs of pyramidal system impairment when the peripheral damage had improved or was stable.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSerum and CSF from 32 patients with idiopathic ALS, 30 age-matched controls and 30 MS patients were investigated regarding immunoglobulin concentration and virus-specific antibodies, the lymphocytes in the peripheral blood and lymphocyte subsets were also investigated. ALS patients' results were compared with findings in MS and controls. The ALS patients had significantly higher IgG concentration in serum than the controls, marked lymphopenia, reduction of CD2, CD8 and Leu 7 positive cells and increase of the CD4/CD8 ratio and of SIg-positive lymphocytes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFItal J Neurol Sci
August 1988
We describe the clinical, CT and MRI evolution of a patient with a primary T-lymphoma of the brain showing features similar to those of leukoencephalopathy. We report the findings that led to the cerebral biopsy performed and we discuss the striking features of this case in the light of previous reports in the literature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPathophysiology of adverse reactions occurring during myelography with non-ionic contrast agents, such as iopamidol, seem related to their direct action on the nervous system. The authors try a multivariate approach, involving neurophysiological, neuropsychological and neurochemical parameters on a pilot group of twelve subjects. Any possible change in the above examinations is thoroughly analyzed and correlated to the postulated neurotoxic properties of contrast media.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Neurochir (Wien)
November 1988
With the increasing interest in callosotomy as treatment for intractable epilepsy, it seems to be important to define the neuropsychological consequences of the related surgical operation. 8 patients suffering from drug-resistant seizures underwent section of the corpus callosum, 6 in the anterior part only and 2 undergoing complete two-stage commissurotomy including the posterior part. Before the callosotomy the patients were studied using a cognitive, affective and behavioural battery which was repeated 15 and 90-100 days after the operation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFItal J Neurol Sci
December 1987
Two patients suffering from seizures unresponsive to medical treatment underwent two-stage "central" commissurotomy. In one patient anterior callostomy was carried out first; in the other the surgical procedure was performed in the reverse order. The clinical, EEG, and neuropsychological features of the two patients are reported before the operation, between stage 1 and stage 2 of the procedure, and after completion of the commissurotomy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeveral techniques are now available for the quantitative and qualitative examination of CSF proteins modified during the course of neurological disease. The CSF and serum of 42 patients suffering from various neurological diseases and of 7 controls were examined using quantitative methods--single radial immunodiffusion, nephelometric analysis--and qualitative methods--isoelectric focusing on polyacrylamide gel and on agarose gel, isoelectric focusing of unconcentrated CSF followed by transfer to cellulose nitrate membranes and immunoperoxidase staining and double antibody peroxidase labeling and avidin-biotin amplification. In the present study the results and the advantages of different methods are described and compared.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwenty-six patients, suffering from various forms of epilepsy (2 with simple partial, 14 with complex partial, and 10 with generalized seizures) and treated with different drugs (10 with DPH, 10 with PB, and 6 with CBZ), underwent neuropsychological tests in order to evaluate: 1) Vigilance; 2) attention; 3) motor, sensory and adaptive (visuomotor) performances; 4) memory span, short-term and long-term memory, considering verbal as well as spatial aspects. The battery of tests was administered prior to treatment and when the drug plasmatic levels were within the ranges considered therapeutic. The results show that in the case of DPH there is an improvement of vigilance and adaptive performances but a worsening of attention and memory functions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFShort-term memory (STM), long-term memory (LTM), and recency judgment were investigated in 75 right-handed nonaphasic patients without visual deficits who had epileptic foci localized in one of four different regions of the brain: right temporal lobe, left temporal lobe, right frontal lobe, and left frontal lobe. The results led to the following conclusions: (1) left temporal lesions yielded comparatively greater impairment for the verbal LTM task, whereas right temporal lesions were more disruptive for the spatial LTM task; (2) no significant differences between left- and right-brain-damaged patients in STM tasks were obtained; (3) left frontal lesions yielded deficits in a recency task in accordance with hemispheric specialization; (4) only prolonged epileptic syndromes impaired neuropsychological performance in those tests; (5) comparisons between male and female patients and between those with and without clear evidence of a structural lesion did not reach statistical significance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThirty-two subjects affected by various types of epilepsy have been studied as follows: 1) from the clinical point of view with careful case history or by direct observation of the seizures; 2) from the EEG point of view by means of prolonged recordings during wakefulness and nocturnal sleep or with pharmacological activations; 3) from a radiological point of view with standard skull radiography, air-encephalography (PNX), brain scanning and, when necessary, with cerebral angiography, mono or bilateral. Furthermore, all the patients underwent a CAT at least once; in the majority of cases this examination was repeated after administration of contrast medium. The following results were obtained by comparing the various examinations: 1) anatomo-elector-clinical correlation was present only in some cases; 2) only in patients with cerebral neoplasms was there proof of an agreement in site between EEG, CAT and PNX; 3) it was not possible to detect in a definite manner epileptic glial lesions with CAT; 4) the EEG analysis, when repeated several times with different methods of investigations, whoed epileptic foci in a higher number compared to the anatomical focal lesions proved by CAT; 5) compared with air-encephalography and morphological brain scanning, CAT usually pointed out a higher number of focal and/or diffused cerebral lesions with a higher degree of precision; viceversa cerebral angiography proved to be irreplaceable in cases where it was necessary to study possible circulatory alterations.
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