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Results 1 - 10 of 29 for Absence epilepsy
  1. Childhood absence epilepsy is a condition characterized by recurrent seizures (epilepsy). This condition begins in childhood, usually between ages 3 and 8. Affected ...
  2. ... Health Condition MedlinePlus Genetics provides information about Childhood absence epilepsy More About This Health Condition ECA4 EJM EJM5 ...
  3. ... neurotoxic starch-like polyglucosans, which form in its absence in progressive myoclonus epilepsy. Hum Mol Genet. 2004 Jun 1;13(11): ...
  4. ... tonic-clonic seizures (or grand mal seizures) and absence seizures. Most gene mutations associated with juvenile myoclonic epilepsy replace single protein building blocks (amino acids) in ...
  5. ... experience a type of seizure called atonic-myoclonic-absence seizure, which begins with a drop of the head, followed by loss of consciousness, then rigid movements of the arms. Epilepsy can worsen, causing prolonged episodes of seizure activity ...
  6. ... infantile spasms), partial or complete loss of consciousness (absence ... with SCN8A-related epilepsy with encephalopathy have more than one type of ...
  7. ... and loss of consciousness. Sometimes, affected individuals have absence seizures, which cause loss of consciousness for a short period that appears as a staring spell. Typically, people with juvenile myoclonic epilepsy develop the characteristic myoclonic seizures in adolescence, then ...
  8. ... symptoms than males. Affected females may have an absence of the tissue connecting the left and right halves of the brain (agenesis of the corpus callosum), some degree of intellectual disability, and recurrent seizures (epilepsy). Some females with an ARX gene mutation experience ...
  9. ... the brain surface is abnormally smooth with an absence (agyria) or ... recurrent seizures (epilepsy) in individuals with ILS.More than 90 percent ...
  10. ... lipoid proteinosis. Affected individuals may have recurrent seizures (epilepsy) or behavioral and neurological problems, which can include headaches, aggressive behaviors, paranoia, hallucinations, short-term memory loss, and absence of fear. These features are thought to be ...
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