in 10 patients with clinical evidence of absence seizures with the aim to better understand and to distinguish this kind of seizure as primarily or secondarily generalized to a specific area and to obtain more information on the neuronal mechanisms involved in the different types of seizures, usuall...
and Dr. Prizant discusses this alongside insights from his book Uniquely Human: A Different Way of Seeing Autism. Encouraging us to reconsider how we interpret challenging behaviors, he suggests that we not try to eliminate these actions but rather try to ...
What are the types of microorganisms? What are the various types of adaptive immunity? What part or ingredient of whole-cell vaccines cause seizures as a side-effect? Explore our homework questions and answers library Search Browse Browse by subject ...
At least one gene (SCL9A9, a.k.a. NHE9) near a large deletion seen in a patient with autism with seizures also showed heterozygous point mutations in American children with autism and seizures. Linkage analysis of larger families with 2-4 affected children suggested that recessive genes are...
Seizures Anxiety Depression Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) Thoughts of suicide Stomach symptoms Stomach pain Diarrhea Constipation Changes in color of your poop Heartburn Reproductive symptoms Erectile dysfunction Changes in your period or worsening PMS ...
Seizures Anxiety Depression Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) Thoughts of suicide Stomach symptoms Stomach pain Diarrhea Constipation Changes in color of your poop Heartburn Reproductive symptoms Erectile dysfunction Changes in your period or worsening PMS ...
A recent study revealed the presence of a single-nucleotide, splice-acceptor variant (NM_058169.4:c.203-1G>T) of BORCS5 in a patient with global developmental delay, corpus callosum agenesis, seizures, polymicrogyria, and abnormality of the cerebral cortex (Charng et al., 2016). On the basi...
Seizures C. Orthostatic hypertension D. Vasodilation E. Decreased proteinuria What would happen to a fetus if the maternal blood had an equal or greater affinity for oxygen than the fetal blood? a. What are the major structural differences between the ...
[52,53] may contribute to thrombotic complications such as stroke and DVT and also lead to cerebral infarctions affecting the blood–brain barrier and oxygen supply, possibly resulting in seizures, as observed in this study [54]. Altogether, this may explain why clinical biomarkers such as CRP...
2a). The patient never had seizures. When examined first in our department at age 8 years, the girl presented with typical clinical features of FMD (fig. 2b–2d). Radiological anomalies confirmed the diagnosis of FMD (fig. 2e–2h). The patient’s mother had a normal clinical phenotype ...