Aron J. Diament
University of São Paulo
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Featured researches published by Aron J. Diament.
Epilepsia | 1992
José Luiz Dias Gherpelli; Fernando Kok; Silvana dal Forno; Lı́via C. Elkis; Beatriz Helena Lefèvre; Aron J. Diament
Summary: We studied 70 children who had experienced at least two seizures before age 12 years, excluding febrile seizures, neonatal seizures, or seizures occurring during a metabolic, or infectious insult to the central nervous system (CNS) and who had been seizure free for at least 2 years. Twenty children (28.5%) experienced a recurrence, 75% during antiepileptic (AED) drug discontinuation or <6 months after discontinuation. Risk factors statistically related to seizure recurrence were >10 seizures before seizure control, an abnormal EEG in the year before AED discontinuation, presence of focal neurologic signs and/or mental retardation, and presence of a mixed seizure pattern. Fourteen children (70%) with recurrence had two or more risk factors, whereas 36 (72%) without recurrence had no risk factor or only one. We conclude that a selected group of epileptic children who remain seizure‐free for a period of at least 2 years can have AEDs discontinued based on presence or absence of risk factors.
American Journal of Medical Genetics | 2000
Cintia Fridman; Fernando Kok; Aron J. Diament; Célia P. Koiffmann
Among 25 patients diagnosed with Angelman syndrome, we detected 21 with deletion and 4 with paternal uniparental disomy (UPD), 2 isodisomies originating by postzygotic error, and 1 MII nondisjunction event. The diagnosis was obtained by molecular techniques, including methylation pattern analysis of exon 1 of SNRPN and microsatellite analysis of loci within and outside the 15q11-q13 region. Most manifestations present in deletion patients are those previously reported. Comparing the clinical data from our and published UPD patients with those with deletions we observed the following: the age of diagnosis is higher in UPD group (average 7 3/12 years), microcephaly is more frequent among deletion patients, UPD children start walking earlier (average age 2 9/12 years), whereas in deletion patients the average is 4 (1/2) years, epilepsy started later in UPD patients (average 5 10/12 years) than in deletion patients (average 1 11/12 years), weight above the 75th centile is reported mainly in UPD patients, complete absence of speech is more common in the deleted (88.9%) than in the UPD patients because half of the children are able to say few words. Thus, besides the abnormalities already described, the UPD patients have somewhat better verbal development, a weight above the 75th centile, and OFC in the upper normal range.
Brain & Development | 1995
Laura Maria de Figueiredo Ferreira Guilhoto; Carlos A.M. Osorio; Lúcia R. Machado; Cleise P. Castro; Maria Luiza Giraldes de Manreza; Dagoberto Callegaro; Fernando Kok; Aron J. Diament
We present clinical data from 14 multiple sclerosis (MS) patients who have been admitted to our hospital between January 1980 and May 1992, whose age of onset ranged from 2-15 years. Our patients could be classified as having a clinically definite form of the disease. Initial symptoms varied from minor, such as motor or sensory impairment, bladder dysfunction, to the worst clinical presentation, suggesting diffuse encephalopathy. All the patients had a relapsing-remitting course. We report the paraclinical and laboratory examinations that were done in these patients. Over the period 1980 to 1992 these patients had 39 attacks. CSF analysis was performed in the phase of activity of the disease on 23 occasions and was normal in 12. At least one brain CT scan was performed in 9 patients and showed white matter abnormalities in 6. Cranial magnetic resonance imaging was done in 6 patients and were abnormal in 5. Visual evoked potential (EP) was abnormal in 7 of 8 patients; brainstem acoustic EP was abnormal in 4 of 8 patients and somatosensory EP in 4 of 8. MS is not so rare in childhood and although its diagnosis is essentially a clinical one, paraclinical investigations are of great value in the identification of demyelinating disorders in childhood.
Pediatric Neurosurgery | 1993
Conti Reed; Sérgio Rosemberg; José Luiz Dias Gherpelli; Hamilton Matushita; Gilberto Machado de Almeida; Aron J. Diament
From 1962 to 1989, 40 infants with brain tumors and less than 2 years old were treated at the Department of Neurology of the Clinical Hospital of the University of São Paulo Medical School. The clinical and neuropathological findings were reviewed as to histological diagnosis, age, sex, signs and symptoms, therapy and outcome. Medulloblastoma was the most common histological type (n = 11), followed by ependymoma (n = 9), choroid plexus tumor (n = 6), astrocytoma (n = 3) and primitive neuroectodermal tumor (n = 2). The tumor was infratentorial in 21 infants, supratentorial in 18 and disseminated in 1.
Human Genetics | 1990
Paulo S. Martinho; Priscila G. Otto; Fernando Kok; Aron J. Diament; Maria Joaquina Marques-Dias; Claudette Hajaj Gonzalez
SummaryRett syndrome is a progressive encephalopathy restricted to the female sex. In the present paper a possible genetic cause for this syndrome is discussed, based on data from the literature as well as our own. Our results are in agreement with others regarding no increase in parental age, or in spontaneous abortions rate among the mothers of affected children and with a normal sex ratio among sibs. We have found no chromosome rearrangement detectable with the methods used and no correlation between fra(X)(p22) and the Rett syndrome. We have observed an alteration in the sequence of replication in one of the two types of late-replicating X-chromosome present in normal women, and suggest that this may signify that genes which are active in the late-replicating X-chromosome are inactivated (or vice-versa) in these patients. This fact could be related to the abnormal phenotype observed in Rett syndrome patients.
Brain & Development | 1995
JoséLuiz Dias Gherpelli; Amaury Reis Nogueira; Eduardo Juan Troster; Alice Dagostinho Deutsch; Cléa Rodrigues Leone; Mario Wilson Iervolino Brotto; Aron J. Diament; JoséLauro Araujo Ramos
We report a case of non-familial hyperekplexia which characteristically developed apnea and feeding difficulties in the neonatal period. The abnormal startle response was evident from the second week of life onwards. The infant showed a marked improvement of the startle response and muscle hypertonia with clonazepam. Clobazam was also tried with no apparent response. A prominent long latency C response was observed on EMG examination, suggesting a possible cortical neuronal hyperexcitability origin for the abnormal startle response observed in hyperekplexia.
Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 1997
Maria Luiza Giraldes de Manreza; José Luiz Dias Gherpelli; Lúcia R. Machado-Haertel; Cristiane C. Costas Pedreira; Carlos Otto Heise; Aron J. Diament
Fifty children, 24 female and 26 male, with ages varying from 6 to 72 months (mean = 23.7 m.) that experienced at least one febrile seizure (FS) entered a prospective study of intermittent therapy with clobazam. Cases with severe neurological abnormalities, progressive neurological disease, afebrile seizures, symptomatic seizures of other nature, or seizures during a central nervous system infection were excluded. Seizures were of the simple type in 25 patients, complex in 20 and unclassified in 5. The mean follow-up period was 7.9 months (range = 1 to 23 m.), and the age at the first seizure varied from 5 to 42 months (mean = 16.8 m.). Clobazam was administered orally during the febrile episode according to the childs weight: up to 5 kg, 5 mg/day; from 5 to 10 kg, 10 mg/day; from 11 to 15 kg, 15 mg/day, and over 15 kg, 20 mg/day. There were 219 febrile episodes, with temperature above 37.8 degrees C, in 40 children during the study period. Twelve children never received clobazam and 28 received the drug at least once. Drug efficacy was measured by comparing FS recurrence in the febrile episodes that were treated with clobazam with those in which only antipyretic measures were taken. Ten children (20%) experienced a FS during the study period. Of the 171 febrile episodes treated with clobazam there were only 3 recurrences (1.7%), while of the 48 episodes treated only with antipyretic measures there were 11 recurrences (22.9%), a difference highly significant (p < 0.0001). Adverse effects occurred in 10/28 patients (35.7%), consisting mainly in vomiting, somnolence and hyperactivity. Only one patient had recurrent vomiting which lead to drug interruption. These effects did not necessarily occurred in every instance the drug was administered, being present in one febrile episode and not in the others. We conclude that clonazepam is safe and efficacious in preventing FS recurrence. It may be an alternative to diazepam in the intermittent treatment of FS recurrence.
Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2002
Umbertina Conti Reed; Rubens Reimão; Adriana Ávila de Espíndola; Fernando Kok; Lúcio Gobbo Ferreira; Maria B. D. Resende; Thelma Messias; Mary S. Carvalho; Aron J. Diament; Milberto Scaff; Suely Kazue Nagahashi Marie
We describe five patients with Schwartz-Jampel syndrome (SJS) examined at the outpatient service for neuromuscular disorders at our Institution from 1996 to 1999 with the objective of emphasizing the characteristic dysmorphic phenotype of SJS and its different clinical forms. Two cases presented SJS-type 1A, two had SJS-type 1B and one manifested SJS-type 2. Two boys with 3 and 13 years of age had generalized stiffness and the characteristic facial as well as osteoarticular changes from birth. Other two boys with 11 and 7 years had less marked dysmorphic changes at birth and manifested myotonia, as a limiting factor, during the second year of age. A girl with two months of age had severe myotonia from birth leading to feeding difficulties. In all cases the diagnosis was based on dysmorphic features, and on electromyographic changes showing continuous electrical activity of muscle fibers. All were treated with carbamazepine, 20-30 mg/Kg since diagnosis. The four boys (all with normal intelligence) improved of myotonia in daily activities, markedly in three, and moderately in one. The girl did not improve and showed global development delay: by the last follow-up (at 20 months of age) she did not sit unsupported, and had mental retardation. Carbamazepine in SJS-type 1 improves general daily performance and psychological status of the patients.
Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 1988
Maria Isabel C. Vergani; Rubens Reimão; Ana A.M.C. Castro e Silva; Mauro Muskat; Sandro Blasi Esposito; Aron J. Diament
A 2 year old boy was admitted owing to a subacute episode of ataxic gait and hearing deficit. Computerized tomography (CT) was normal and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) analysis revealed gamma globulins level of 15.4% (normal 7 to 14%). There was spontaneous remission after 7 months. At 5 years of age the boy incurred a second episode with predominantly right appendicular ataxia and tonic gaze deviation to the right side. CT showed a low-density lesion in the white matter adjacent to the right frontal horn. Visual and auditory evoked potentials were abnormal. CSF revealed a mild increase in gamma globulins level of 14.5% with an abnormal T lymphocyte subsets study. The combination of visual, cerebellar, brain stem and paraventricular lesions with clear remissions and exacerbations, supported by CT, CSF and evoked potentials findings suggests the diagnosis of multiple sclerosis even at this early age.
Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 1976
Aron J. Diament; F. W. Rodrigues
In a study designed to determine standards for the Developmental Neurological Examination (DNE) several measures of the head were also recorded. The study consisted in the examination of 200 children, half from each sex, 40 from each age group (3 to 7-years of age). These children were selected among 755 normal pre-school-age children, living in the city of São Paulo, Brazil). The criteria for selection were both anamnestic and clinic. The following measures of the head were recorded: cephalic perimeter, biauricular and antero-posterior distances (Diament, 1967). A new cephalic index (nCI) was also determined (Diament, 1968). This index is useful in detecting changes in head shape mainly in cases of precocious cranioestenosis (Diament, 1968; Facure, 1972). The statistical analysis consisted in determining means and standard errors for each measure. For the new cephalic index it was shown through the Kruskal-Wallis test that there were no significant difference between age and sex. Therefore we considered all groups together to find out the tolerance region for the new index which turned out to be given by the interval: 0.848-1.002. This result is based in 186 cases since 14 were excluded because of some problems in the recording process. Therefore we expect with a conficence of 95% that the above interval covers 90% of the population, in the 3 to 7 years age-groups independently of sex.