Leathanach 1 ó 36 torthaí
A patient was treated for a convulsive disorder with "average" doses of diphenylhydantoin, and developed a cerebellar syndrome secondary to drug intoxication, documented by the presence of diphenylhydantoin blood levels above 60 microgram/ml. The individual's low capacity to metabolize the drug
Neuropathological investigations of CNS of two epileptic patients (a man and a woman), who had been treated over years with diphenylhydantoin, disclosed in both cases severe cerebellar atrophy, with almost complete loss of Purkinje cells. Hypoxic tissue alterations were found neither in cerebellum
Seven epileptic patients with permanent ataxic dysfunction following DPH treatment are described. The ataxia correlates with cerebellar atrophy, though the extents of clinical and structural lesions are not necessarily proportional. Cerebellar atrophy is demonstrated by CT scans, the vermal region
Computed tomographical findings are documented for 140 patients with different cerebellar atrophic or heredodegenerative processes. There are idiopathic cerebellar atrophies, so called alcoholic and paraneoplastic cerebellar atrophies, cerebellar atrophies associated with nutritional deficiency
Akinetic mutism (AM) is a rare, specific, unconscious state. An AM patient seems to be awake, lacks mental activity, is unable to speak, and does not respond to any environmental stimulus. Cyclical sleep and awake states are maintained, and incontinence is present. Various factors such as tumor,
Diphenylhydantoin (DFH) is known to yield cerebellar ataxia in chronically treated epileptic patient due to cerebellar atrophy with loss of Purkinje cells. Little attention has been paid in the literature to the acute DFH intoxication bearing cerebellar symptoms. We report a patient afflicted with
The oral administration of diphenylhydantoin (DPH) for a period of more than nine months produced ataxia and muscle weakness in rats. The cerebellum of rats which were fed food containing DPH for a period of 12 months was studied electrophysiologically and morphologically. In the DPH-administered
This is a report of an autopsied case of dentatorubropallidoluysian atrophy (DRPLA) with atypical neuropathological findings. The patients was a 31-year-old female. Her clinical symptoms were epileptic seizures, cerebellar ataxia, choreoathetosis and dementia. A neuropathological examination
Mild overdosage of phenytoin produces reversible cerebellar symptoms (nystagmus, double vision, dysarthria and ataxia). Several case reports suggest that relatively mild and relatively short intoxication can lead to cerebellar degeneration. We observed 11 patients who had episodes of abnormally