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NEUROLOGY 1975;25:819
© 1975 American Academy of Neurology

Focal seizures and aminophylline

PHILIP R. YARNELL, M.O. and NAI-SHIN CHU, M.D.

Department of Neurology, Denver General Hospital, University of Colorado Medical School, Denver.

Intravenous aminophylline therapy for acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease may trigger prolonged and difficult to control focal motor seizures with generalization. This can occur in previously neurologically asymptomatic patients and be associated with a poor outcome. Most patients exhibited periodic lateralized epileptiform discharges or had autopsy-proved focal central nervous system lesions, or both. If focal and generalized seizures develop during aminophylline therapy, drug toxicity should be suspect as announcing a focal central lesion. Careful individual monitoring of aminophylline dose and administration rate is essential.

This paper was read in part at the twenty-seventh annual meeting of the American Academy of Neurology, Bal Harbour, FL, May, 1975.

Received for publication January 15, 1975.

Dr. Yarnell's address is Denver General Hospital, West Sixth Ave. and Cherokee St., Denver, CO 80204.




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