Disease | dementia |
Symptom | C0036572|seizures |
Sentences | 10 |
PubMedID- 22503161 | The phenotype of the carriers varied from rapid progressing alzheimer's disease to frontotemporal dementia, with spasticity and seizures also observed. |
PubMedID- 23302773 | Psen1 has been described in spastic paraparesis, frontotemporal dementia, myoclonus with seizures, and predominantly psychiatric presentations . |
PubMedID- 26102197 | Severe hypoglycemia is a potentially life-threatening condition that can cause seizures, loss of consciousness, brain damage, dementia, and even death. |
PubMedID- 26089671 | Thus, the presence of faciobrachial dystonic seizures and hyponatremia in a patient with progressive dementia and psychiatric symptoms may suggest a number of neurological diseases, but cjd needs to be considered. |
PubMedID- 21716870 | 1 caa can be clinically suspected in normotensive patients with headache, vomiting, seizures, decreased of consciousness, dementia, recurrent tia and/or ischemic stroke and/or hemorrhagic stroke. |
PubMedID- 21541318 | Exclusion criteria were alcohol addiction lasting more than 15 years, alcohol dementia, current alcohol withdrawal seizures and actual detoxification therapy, acute stage of alcohol withdrawal with abstinence symptoms, treatment lasting more than 6 months from the beginning of alcohol withdrawal, drug abuse, organic illnesses involving the central nervous system, psychotic disorders, electroconvulsive therapy, any form of epilepsy and epileptiform eeg changes, and mental retardation (iq raven higher than 90). |
PubMedID- 21822699 | In the present work, we described the case of a late-onset ad patient, without any positive family history for dementia, and associated with seizures and behavioural symptoms. |
PubMedID- 20368139 | These range from exercise intolerance to diseases with severe body-wide impact, such as the mitochon-drial encephalopathy, lactic acidosis and stroke syndrome (melas -- a rare form of dementia associated with seizures); headaches; muscle disease and stroke-induced paralysis; and kearns-sayre syndrome (kss), which causes a person to lose full function of their heart, eye and muscle movements. |
PubMedID- 23990726 | Several drugs prescribed for patients with phn increase the risk of cognitive impairment, seizures, and falls in patients with dementia, traumatic brain injury, a history of stroke, or other brain disorders or injuries (table 4). |
PubMedID- 23155407 | The incidence of seizures in individuals with ad-type dementia appears to be increased, especially in early-onset cases, although generalized convulsive episodes are rare . |
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