Delayed onset of partial epilepsy of temporal lobe origin following acute clioquinol encephalopathy

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Abstract

Twelve cases have been reported in the literature to have developed acute, largely reversible, global amnesic syndromes some hours after ingesting substantial doses of clioquinol. Two of these cases presented again after asymptomatic intervals of some 12 years. Both had recently developed typical clinical and electroencephalographic evidence of partial epilepsy originating in a temporal lobe. The similarity of clinical events in these two subjects, the absence of any other known cause for their epilepsy and the fact that, in mice, acute clioquinol overdosage causes hippocampal and amygdaloid injury, suggest that the drug was responsible for both the acute encephalopathy and the epilepsy of delayed onset.

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APA

Ferrier, T. M., Schwieger, A. C., & Eadie, M. J. (1987). Delayed onset of partial epilepsy of temporal lobe origin following acute clioquinol encephalopathy. Journal of Neurology Neurosurgery and Psychiatry, 50(1), 93–95. https://doi.org/10.1136/jnnp.50.1.93

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