6 research outputs found

    Not only a matter of epilepsy: Early problems of cognition and behavior in children with "epilepsy only" - A prospective, longitudinal, controlled study starting at diagnosis

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    Objective. To understand early educational and behavioral predicament in childhood "epilepsy only." Methods. A multicenter, prospective, longitudinal study was conducted of 51 outpatient schoolchildren with newly diagnosed idiopathic or cryptogenic epilepsy and 48 sex-matched classmate control subjects. All children underwent neuropsychological assessment 3 times within the first year after diagnosis; parents and teachers completed behavior questionnaires, and patients' parents were interviewed to inventory contextual adversity. Principal components analysis of cognition and behavior disclosed 6 major components that were related with the interview data ( repeated measures analysis of variance). Results. Despite similar intelligence and educational background, significantly more patients (51%) than control subjects (27%) required special educational assistance. Patients obtained worse scores across components of cognition and behavior. Parents and teachers perceived patients to have more behavioral problems. Differences between groups existed at pretreatment baseline. Over time, notwithstanding stable percentages of poor scores in both groups, nonpersistence of poor scores was impressive ( each time other children scored poorly in other domains). Rather than epilepsy characteristics, contextual adversities were significant risk factors. Conclusion. Already in the earliest stage of the illness, children with epilepsy are liable to vicissitudes in cognitive and behavioral functioning. Contextual variables are all-important

    Use of a gonadotropin releasing hormone agonist implant as an alternative for surgical castration in male ferrets (Mustela putorius furo)

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    Surgical castration in ferrets has been implicated as an etiological factor in the development of hyperadrenocorticism in this species due to a castration-related increase in plasma gonadotropins. In search for a suitable alternative, the effect of treatment with the depot GnRH-agonist implant, deslorelin, on plasma testosterone concentrations and concurrent testes size, spermatogenesis, and the typical musky odor of intact male ferrets was investigated. Twenty-one male ferrets, equally divided into three groups, were either surgically castrated, received a slow release deslorelin implant or received a placebo implant. Plasma FSH and testosterone concentrations, testis size and spermatogenesis were all suppressed after the use of the deslorelin implant. The musky odor in the ferrets which had received a deslorelin implant was less compared to the ferrets which were either surgically castrated or had received a placebo implant. These results indicate that the deslorelin implant effectively prevents reproduction and the musky odor of intact male ferrets and is therefore considered a suitable alternative for surgical castration in these animals. (C) 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved
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