نتایج جستجو برای: occipital seizures

تعداد نتایج: 81232  

Journal: :Neurology 2013
Akshay Shah Daniel Korya Brandon T Larsen Myrka Torres Kendra Drake John La Wall

A 58-year-old man presented with a 6-month history of headaches, progressive left homonymous hemianopia, and right-sided paresthesias. MRI revealed bilateral parietal and occipital enhancing lesions (figure 1, A–C) suggestive of cerebritis or posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome due to history of hypertension. Worsening vision prompted neuroimaging 18 months later, showing contrast-enha...

2017
Sreenivasa Rao Sudulagunta Mahesh Babu Sodalagunta Monica Kumbhat Aravinda Settikere Nataraju

Posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome (PRES) is a clinico-radiological syndrome characterized by a headache, seizures, altered mental status and visual loss and characterized by white matter vasogenic edema affecting the posterior occipital and parietal lobes of the brain predominantly. This clinical syndrome is increasingly recognized due to improvement and availability of brain imaging...

Journal: :Journal of the neurological sciences 1997
C M Harris S Boyd K Chong W Harkness B G Neville

Epileptic nystagmus (EN) is a rare form of nystagmus that occurs only during epileptic seizures. We report an infantile case in which EN was first noted at 10 days of age. Electronystagmography showed a right-beating nystagmus with predominantly linear slow phases that traversed the midline. Neuro-imaging revealed dysplasia of the left middle temporal gyrus extending posteriorly into the pariet...

Journal: :Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry 1993
A Magaudda B Dalla Bernardina P De Marco Z Sfaello M Longo V Colamaria O Daniele G Tortorella M A Tata R Di Perri

Twenty patients affected by bilateral occipital cortical-subcortical calcification (BOC) are described, 19 (95%) had epilepsy. In 8 of 16 cases studied, intestinal biopsy revealed coeliac disease. Fourteen patients had occipital partial epilepsy with a relatively benign outcome, while 4 patients were affected by a severe form of epilepsy, with very frequent, drug-resistant, generalised and part...

Journal: :Brain : a journal of neurology 2000
M J Hennessy R D Elwes C D Binnie C E Polkey

From a series of 282 consecutive temporal resections for medically intractable epilepsy associated with mesial temporal sclerosis (MTS), dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumour (DNT) or non-specific pathology (NSP), 51 patients had persistent or recurrent seizures occurring at least monthly. Of these patients, 44 underwent detailed assessment of their postoperative seizures, which included clin...

Journal: :Seizure 2001
R Ribacoba Montero C Garcia Pravia A Astudillo J Salas Puig

We present a clinico-pathological case report in which both cortical dysplasia and epilepsy coexisted: a 30 year old male who was dead on arrival at hospital. One and a half hours earlier he had developed complex partial status with peri-oral cyanosis. At post mortem examination his brain showed bilateral occipital frontal polymicrogyria with unlayered neuronal migration disorder; in other part...

Journal: :Practical neurology 2015
Khalid Ali

Retro-chiasmal lesions almost always give rise to homonymous field defects with only one exception. The nasal visual field extends to 60% of the horizon, whereas the temporal field extends to a further 30°-40° beyond that; this part of the visual field is represented on the contralateral anterior parieto-occipital sulcus. A lesion in this area will give rise to monocular visual field defect aff...

Journal: :Indian journal of pathology & microbiology 2016
Vikas Shashikant Kavishwar Kirti G Chadha Shaikhali Moiz Barodawala Anuradha Krishna Murthy

Ganglioglioma is a slow-growing relatively low-grade mixed glioneuronal tumor with most cases corresponding to the WHO Grade I category. It frequently presents with seizures. The temporal lobe is the most common location followed by frontal, parietal, and occipital lobes. These generally behave in a benign fashion and have a favorable prognosis. We describe a case of a 24-year-old male presenti...

Journal: :Developmental medicine and child neurology 2013
Alexandra M Johnson Russell C Dale Louise Wienholt Marios Hadjivassiliou Daniel Aeschlimann John A Lawson

A 4-year-old boy presented with occipital seizures but normal initial neuroimaging and proved refractory to antiepileptic medications. On repeat neuroimaging after 1 year, he had developed bi-occipital calcification and was then found to have positive coeliac serology. He was diagnosed with coeliac disease, epilepsy, and cerebral calcifications (CEC) and became seizure free after starting the g...

2016
Xianzeng Tong Jun Wu Fuxin Lin Yong Cao Yuanli Zhao Zhen Jin Shuo Wang

Background: Occipital arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) are still one of neurosurgery’s most intriguing and challenging pathologies. In this study, we reviewed our series of patients with occipital AVMs admitted in Beijing Tiantan Hospital from June 2013 through January 2015 and attempted to evaluate the risk factors of visual field deficits (VFDs) in these patients at presentation. Methods: F...

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