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of 8
pro vyhledávání: '"Megdad, Zaatreh"'
Autor:
Megdad Zaatreh
Publikováno v:
Expert Opinion on Drug Safety. 2:385-393
Anticonvulsant-induced dyskinesia (AID) is an underdiagnosed side effect of many anticonvulsants that may take place during initial or chronic treatment at normal or toxic drug levels. The occurrence of AID subjects the patient to another medical con
Publikováno v:
Epilepsy Research. 54:85-90
Rationale: Seizures may produce a variety of autonomic alterations. These alterations may occur due to evoked autonomic reflexes or as a direct cortical effect on autonomic control. In animal studies, lock step phenomena of interictal discharges to a
Publikováno v:
Seizure. 10:596-599
Chorea is a rare side effect of anticonvulsants. We describe three patients who developed chorea secondary to anticonvulsant combination use. A mechanism to explain this finding is proposed.After identification of an index case with anticonvulsant-in
Autor:
Megdad, Zaatreh, Wael, Alabulkarim
Publikováno v:
The New England journal of medicine. 354(26)
Autor:
MEGDAD ZAATREH, ALAN FINKEL
Publikováno v:
Southern medical journal. 95(11)
Spontaneous intracranial hypotension (SIH) is an increasingly recognized syndrome. Postural headache with typical findings on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) are the key to diagnosis. Delay in diagnosing this condition may subject patients to unnece
Publikováno v:
Neurology. 55(12)
Article abstract Patients with hypothalamic hamartomas and precocious puberty may develop gelastic seizures that are resistant to conventional antiepileptic drug therapies. While treating precocious puberty in two such patients with long-acting GnRH
Autor:
Megdad Zaatreh
Publikováno v:
Clinical Neuropharmacology. 28:243-244
Status epilepticus in patients with acute intermittent porphyria (AIP) are difficult to treat. In this report the author describes a patient with AIP and status epilepticus who was successfully treated with a combination of intravenous magnesium and
Autor:
Megdad Zaatreh, Wael Alabulkarim
Publikováno v:
New England Journal of Medicine. 354:2802-2802
A 55-year-old man presented with a two-day history of headache, fever, and generalized weakness. He had received a cadaveric kidney transplant five years earlier. His medications included 5 mg of tacrolimus twice a day and 10 mg of prednisone daily.