All Relations between Epilepsy and Cerebral Palsy

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
A E Lipp-Zwahlen, T Deonna, J L Micheli, A Calame, R Chrzanowski, E Cêtr. Prognostic value of neonatal CT scans in asphyxiated term babies: low density score compared with neonatal neurological signs. Neuropediatrics. vol 16. issue 4. 1986-01-31. PMID:4080097. among the twenty-two survivors, the follow-up (mean age 19.2 +/- 6.0 mts) revealed fourteen (56%) with normal outcome, two (8%) with transient neurodevelopmental anomalies during the first year, and nine (36%) with permanent abnormalities such as cerebral palsy and/or retardation (mainly global) and/or epilepsy. 1986-01-31 2023-08-11 Not clear
R Davis, E Gray, H Engle, A Dusna. Reduction of intractable seizures using cerebellar stimulation. Applied neurophysiology. vol 46. issue 1-4. 1984-04-02. PMID:6608318. of the 32 patients with active intractable seizures, 27 had spastic cerebral palsy (cp) and 5 had epilepsy (ep), and all underwent chronic cerebellar stimulation (ccs) (amplitude 1-2 microc/cm2/phase, rate 10-180 pps, duration of implantation 0.5-7 years, average 4.5 years). 1984-04-02 2023-08-12 Not clear
D V Forres. Bipolar illness after right hemispherectomy. A response to lithium carbonate and carbamazepine. Archives of general psychiatry. vol 39. issue 7. 1983-04-07. PMID:6819839. a man with cerebral palsy had his right cerebral cortex removed at the age of 18 years because of intractable epilepsy. 1983-04-07 2023-08-12 Not clear
D S Herbst, P A Bair. Sib risks for nonspecific mental retardation in British Columbia. American journal of medical genetics. vol 13. issue 2. 1982-12-18. PMID:7137231. these risks varied depending on sex, mr level, and whether the mental retardation was associated with hydrocephalus, microcephalus, cerebral palsy, or epilepsy. 1982-12-18 2023-08-12 Not clear
B Hagberg, G Hagberg, A Lewerth, U Lindber. Mild mental retardation in Swedish school children. II. Etiologic and pathogenetic aspects. Acta paediatrica Scandinavica. vol 70. issue 4. 1982-02-25. PMID:7315287. neurological abnormalities were found in 43% of the children, epilepsy in 12%, cerebral palsy in 9% and a clumsy child syndrome in 23%. 1982-02-25 2023-08-12 Not clear
S Giménez-Roldán, M Martí. Startle epilepsy complicating Down syndrome during adulthood. Annals of neurology. vol 7. issue 1. 1980-05-14. PMID:6444792. triggering factors, seizure patterns, and ictal electroencephalograms were the same as in startle epilepsy occurring in children with cerebral palsy but differed in that there was no clinical or radiological evidence of a focal brain lesion in the vicinity of the motor supplementary cortex. 1980-05-14 2023-08-12 Not clear
Cerebellar stimulation for epilepsy and cerebral palsy. Lancet (London, England). vol 2. issue 8103. 1979-02-21. PMID:82789. cerebellar stimulation for epilepsy and cerebral palsy. 1979-02-21 2023-08-11 Not clear
I Bjerr. Neurological investigation of 5-year-old children with low birthweight. Acta paediatrica Scandinavica. vol 64. issue 6. 1976-01-30. PMID:52994. impairment of hearing and of vision, epilepsy and mental retardation were more common in children with cerebral palsy and mbd. 1976-01-30 2023-08-11 Not clear
M de Negri, V Lonati Grillo, F Bertamin. [Consciousness of their illness in children with epilepsy and children with cerebral palsy]. Revue de neuropsychiatrie infantile et d'hygiene mentale de l'enfance. vol 21. issue 1. 1973-05-02. PMID:4689725. [consciousness of their illness in children with epilepsy and children with cerebral palsy]. 1973-05-02 2023-08-11 Not clear
P Graham, M Rutte. Organic brain dysfunction and child psychiatric disorder. British medical journal. vol 3. issue 5620. 1968-10-25. PMID:4233874. the association between organic brain dysfunction and psychiatric disorder was studied by comparing the findings in the children with epilepsy or with lesions above the brain stem (cerebral palsy and similar disorders) with those in (1) a random sample of the general population, (2) children with lesions below the brain stem (for example, muscular dystrophy or paralyses following poliomyelitis), and (3) children with other chronic physical handicaps not involving the nervous system (for example, asthma, heart disease, or diabetes).psychiatric disorders in children with neuro-epileptic conditions were five times as common as in the general population and three times as common as in children with chronic physical handicaps not involving the brain. 1968-10-25 2023-08-11 Not clear