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Neurologic Complications of Pediatric Lung Transplantation
Neurol 53:1542-1549, Wong,M.,et al, 1999
See this aricle in Pubmed

Article Abstract
Sixty-one (45%) patients had neurologic complications. The most common presenting symptoms were seizures (27%), followed by encephalopathy, headache, depression, and focal neurologic deficits. Cyclosporine toxicity (7%) and hypoxia-ischem ia (7%) constituted the most commonly identified etiologies, followed by stroke, metabolic, and infectious causes. Risk factor analysis found that patients with interstitial lung disease had a higher frequency of hypoxic-ischemic events and patients with seizures had significantly elevated trough cyclosporine levels. Patients with stroke and hypoxia had a poor neurologic prognosis, whereas patients with cyclosporine toxicity uniformly had good outcome. Neurologic complications occur frequently after lu ng transplantation in pediatric patients, with seizures being the most common presenting symptom. Except in patients with stroke and hypoxia, prognosis is generally favorable. Seizures not accompanied by an irreversible structural etiology are unlikely to require long-term treatment with antiepileptic medications. Cyclosporine neurotoxicity typically resolves without requiring discontinuation of immunosuppressive therapy.
 
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cerebrovascular accident
chemotherapy,CNS treatment and complications with
children
cyclosporine
encephalopathy
headache
hypoxia
immunosuppressive agents
lung transplantation
neurotoxic
organ transplantation
prognosis
seizure

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