Acute Amphetamine Intoxication
Benzodiazepines are the preferred initial treatment for CNS excitation, seizures, tachycardia, and hypertension.[merckmanuals.com]
Nausea, vomiting, drowsiness, vertigo, and possible convulsions and respiratory paralysis characterize this type of poisoning.[medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com]
[…] threshold and altering thermoregulation. [29] Of all neuroleptic drugs, however, haloperidol rarely is associated with seizures (minimal effects on seizure threshold).[emedicine.medscape.com]
Carbon Monoxide Poisoning
Contrary to the seizures, status epilepticus has been rarely observed in these conditions.[ncbi.nlm.nih.gov]
The patient was admitted to the ED with nausea, dizziness, vertigo, and syncope. CONCLUSIONS The diagnosis of CO poisoning depends on suspicious anamnesis.[ncbi.nlm.nih.gov]
The patient described vague, non-specific symptoms not consistent with a diagnosis of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo, labyrinthitis or Ménière's disease.[ncbi.nlm.nih.gov]
Ergotism
It discusses diseases related to infant feeding deficiency diseases, congenital abnormalities, and infectious diseases.[universitypublishingonline.org]
Headaches, vertigo, hallucinations, mania, psychosis, convulsions (ranging from simple seizures to painful muscular contractions and tetanus-like cramps) and coma are constitutive[symptoma.com]
[…] of the extremeties Lysurgic Acid Diethylamide Ignis Sacer, the Holy Fire Middle Age name for gangrenous ergotism Hallucination, epileptic convulsions, vomiting, diarrhea, vertigo[quizlet.com]
Cytomegalovirus Infection
Abstract Congenital cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection is the leading cause of severe congenital abnormalities.[ncbi.nlm.nih.gov]
While receiving antiviral and corticosteroid therapy, the patient developed seizures related to a cerebral vasculitis.[ncbi.nlm.nih.gov]
Seizures, pancytopenia, diabetes, diarrhoea, and (probably) drug-induced liver damage and cholangitis were observed in the course of treatment.[ncbi.nlm.nih.gov]
Acute Arsenic Poisoning
Neurological symptoms include acute psychosis and seizures, encephalopathy, and peripheral neuropathy.[symptoma.com]
Severe headache, vertigo, periorbtal odema, skeletal muscles cramps. Renal damage manifested as Oligurea, Proteinurea, and Haematuria.[slideshare.net]
Overexposure may cause headaches, drowsiness, confusion, seizures, and life-threatening complications.[rarediseases.org]
Hypoglycemia
Congenital portosystemic shunts present with various associated complications, such as other congenital malformations, hyperammonemia, or hepatopulmonary syndrome.[ncbi.nlm.nih.gov]
Postoperatively the patient demonstrated both generalized and focal seizure activity.[ncbi.nlm.nih.gov]
Severe hypoglycemia eventually lead to glucose deprivation of the central nervous system resulting in hunger; sweating; paresthesia; impaired mental function; seizures; coma[icd9data.com]
Hyponatremia
Seizures in babies are most commonly caused by hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy, central nervous system (CNS) infections, trauma, congenital CNS abnormalities, and metabolic[en.wikipedia.org]
Post-transplant seizures are uncommon in young kidney transplant recipients but can be harbingers of devastating outcomes such as cerebral edema and death.[ncbi.nlm.nih.gov]
The "Cardinal Presentations Section" provides quick and easy reference to differential diagnosis and directed testing for fever in the adult patient; dizziness and vertigo[books.google.ca]
Head Injury
Abstract Patent foramen ovale (PFO) is a common congenital abnormality with a high prevalence of approximately 25 % in the general population and an even higher incidence[doi.org]
Acute encephalopathy with biphasic seizures and late reduced diffusion (AESD) presents a distinct clinical course of biphasic seizures and impaired consciousness.[ncbi.nlm.nih.gov]
Vestibular Disorders Assoc: Dizziness or Vertigo - Information, resources, and support.[headinjury.com]
Stroke
Rupture of an artery can be due to factors such as an aneurysm (where a weakened section of an artery balloons out), a congenitally abnormal connection of blood vessels, or[southerncross.co.nz]
Twenty patients (40%) had a single seizure, and most seizures (34, or 68%) were simple partial seizures or partial seizures with 2 generalization.[doi.org]
We present a case of a previously healthy 36-year-old man who presented with vertigo and vomiting. MRI showed posterior circulation territory infarction.[ncbi.nlm.nih.gov]
Temporal Lobe Epilepsy
malformations, deformations, and chromosomal abnormalities ( Q00-Q99 ) endocrine, nutritional and metabolic diseases ( E00 - E88 ) injury, poisoning and certain other consequences[icd10data.com]
[…] generalized seizures.[ncbi.nlm.nih.gov]
Temporal lobe seizures are often accompanied by strange sensations, sweating, flushing, vertigo, epigastric sensations, taste, and hearing of sounds or melodies, nausea, hallucinations[epilepsyqueensland.com.au]