Epilepsia
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Many factors associated with hormone function have an impact on the course of epilepsy. Patients with epilepsy may have disturbances in sexual function such as anovulatory cycles in women and decreased libido and potency in men. Data indicate seizures, especially those arising in the limbic system, may influence the hypothalamic pituitary axis. ⋯ Changes in seizures during the menstrual cycle (catamenial epilepsy) have been found in some women: seizures were fewer during the luteal phase but increased when progesterone levels declined. Some improvement in seizure frequency has been shown in pilot studies using medroxyprogesterone acetate, a synthetic progesterone. Current concepts of the interrelationship among epilepsy, sex hormones, and antiepileptic drugs are discussed.
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The purpose of this study was to determine if epileptogenic activity is associated with changes in autonomic cardiac neural discharge and the development of arrhythmias. Nine cats, anesthetized with alpha-chloralose, received pentylenetetrazol (PTZ), 10, 20, 50, 100, 200, and 2,000 mg/kg, intravenously at 10 min intervals. The following were monitored: neural discharge from 1 to 3 postganglionic cardiac sympathetic branches (8 cats, 17 nerves) and the vagus (7 cats, 8 nerves); the electrocorticogram; blood pressure; heart rate; and lead II electrocardiogram. ⋯ This autonomic imbalance was associated with both interictal and ictal epileptogenic activity. Almost invariably, interictal discharge occurred after PTZ, 10 mg/kg; with higher doses, the duration of ictal activity increased although interictal discharges were present. The altered cardiac autonomic neural discharge was associated with minimal epileptogenic activity in the form of interictal discharges and cardiac arrhythmias which may contribute to sudden unexplained death of the epileptic.
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A 37-year-old woman with a post-traumatic seizure disorder had four well-documented episodes of postictal acute pulmonary edema and respiratory failure. Subtherapeutic blood concentrations of phenytoin were documented on each admission. Each episode followed one or more grand mal seizures and was characterized by the development of diffuse nodular-appearing alveolar infiltrates, tachypnea, and severe hypoxemia that rapidly resolved with supportive therapy. ⋯ A review of the English literature revealed only 11 reported cases of postictal pulmonary edema since 1965 and a total of 42 episodes in 27 patients since 1908. There were no clearly documented cases of postical pulmonary edema following electroconvulsive therapy in 18 published reports totaling more than 38,000 subjects. Our findings suggest that while postictal pulmonary edema may occur repeatedly in the same patient, the overall frequency of this complication is low.
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The properties of Althesin (anticonvulsant activity, depression of oxygen consumption, lowering of ICP, rapid excretion) led us to use this steroid combination to treat 11 patients in status epilepticus resistant to the standard drugs (benzodiazepines and barbiturates). The administration of Althesin by slow intravenous injection was ineffective in 2 of the 3 patients thus treated. The doses used (2--10 ml) were probably too small. ⋯ In this group the doses used varied from 25 to 50 ml. The 2 patients in whom it was necessary to repeat Althesin administration and combine it with other drugs had both been operated on for severe brain injuries involving marked cerebral edema. In spite of the very small number of cases, the definitive arrest of status epilepticus obtained in 8 out of 11 patients first treated with other drugs is encouraging: Althesin probably may be regarded as an adjunct in the treatment of status epilepticus.