Literature DB >> 18266748

Epilepsy surgery in patients with normal or nonfocal MRI scans: integrative strategies offer long-term seizure relief.

Prasanna Jayakar1, Catalina Dunoyer, Pat Dean, John Ragheb, Trevor Resnick, Glenn Morrison, Sanjiv Bhatia, Michael Duchowny.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Excisional surgery achieves seizure freedom in a large proportion of children with intractable lesional epilepsy, but the outcome for children without a focal lesion on MRI is less clear. We report the outcome of a cohort predominantly of children with nonlesional intractable partial epilepsy undergoing resective surgery.
METHODS: We studied 102 patients with nonlesional intractable partial epilepsy who underwent excisional surgery. The epileptogenic region was identified by integrating clinical exam and video-EEG data complemented by ictal SPECT (n = 40), PET (n = 10), extraoperative subdural monitoring (n = 80), and electrocorticography (n = 22). All patients had follow-up greater than 2 years, 76 patients had 5-year follow-up, and 43 patients had 10-year follow-up.
RESULTS: A total of 66 resections were unilobar; 36 were multilobar. One patient died of causes unrelated to seizures or surgery. At 2-year follow-up, 44 of 101 patients were seizure-free, 15 experienced >90% reduction, 17 had >50% reduction, and 25 were unchanged. At 5-year follow-up, 35 of 76 patients were seizure-free, 12 experienced >90% reduction, 12 had >50% reduction, and 17 were unchanged. At 10-year follow-up, 16 of 43 patients were seizure-free, 13 experienced >90% reduction, 7 had >50% reduction, and 7 were unchanged. Outcomes correlated with the presence of convergent focal interictal spikes (p < 0.005) on the scalp EEG and completeness of resection (p < 0.0005).
CONCLUSIONS: Our findings demonstrate that excisional surgery is successful in the majority of children with nonlesional partial epilepsy. A multimodal integrative approach can minimize the size of resection and alleviate the need for invasive EEG monitoring. Focal interictal spikes and completeness of resection predict good outcome. The benefits of surgery are long-lasting.

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Mesh:

Year:  2008        PMID: 18266748     DOI: 10.1111/j.1528-1167.2007.01428.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Epilepsia        ISSN: 0013-9580            Impact factor:   5.864


  34 in total

Review 1.  Neuroimaging of epilepsy.

Authors:  Fernando Cendes; William H Theodore; Benjamin H Brinkmann; Vlastimil Sulc; Gregory D Cascino
Journal:  Handb Clin Neurol       Date:  2016

2.  Surgery for epilepsy.

Authors:  Siobhan West; Sarah J Nevitt; Jennifer Cotton; Sacha Gandhi; Jennifer Weston; Ajay Sudan; Roberto Ramirez; Richard Newton
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2019-06-25

3.  Localization of focal epileptic discharges using functional connectivity magnetic resonance imaging.

Authors:  Steven M Stufflebeam; Hesheng Liu; Jorge Sepulcre; Naoaki Tanaka; Randy L Buckner; Joseph R Madsen
Journal:  J Neurosurg       Date:  2011-02-25       Impact factor: 5.115

4.  Leaving tissue associated with infrequent intracranial EEG seizure onsets is compatible with post-operative seizure freedom.

Authors:  Cyrus Huang; Eric D Marsh; Daniela M Ziskind; Juanita M Celix; Bradley Peltzer; Merritt W Brown; Phillip B Storm; Brian Litt; Brenda E Porter
Journal:  J Pediatr Epilepsy       Date:  2012

Review 5.  Electro-clinical-pathological correlations in focal cortical dysplasia (FCD) at young ages.

Authors:  Hans Holthausen; Tom Pieper; Peter Winkler; Ingmar Bluemcke; Manfred Kudernatsch
Journal:  Childs Nerv Syst       Date:  2014-09-27       Impact factor: 1.475

6.  Multimodality imaging in the surgical treatment of children with nonlesional epilepsy.

Authors:  J H Seo; K Holland; D Rose; L Rozhkov; H Fujiwara; A Byars; T Arthur; T DeGrauw; J L Leach; M J Gelfand; L Miles; F T Mangano; P Horn; K H Lee
Journal:  Neurology       Date:  2011-01-04       Impact factor: 9.910

7.  Can histologically normal epileptogenic zone share common electrophysiological phenotypes with focal cortical dysplasia? SEEG-based study in MRI-negative epileptic patients.

Authors:  Stanislas Lagarde; Julia Scholly; Irina Popa; Maria Paola Valenti-Hirsch; Agnès Trebuchon; Aileen McGonigal; Mathieu Milh; Anke M Staack; Béatrice Lannes; Benoît Lhermitte; François Proust; Mustapha Benmekhbi; Didier Scavarda; Romain Carron; Dominique Figarella-Branger; Edouard Hirsch; Fabrice Bartolomei
Journal:  J Neurol       Date:  2019-05-04       Impact factor: 4.849

8.  Role of subdural electrocorticography in prediction of long-term seizure outcome in epilepsy surgery.

Authors:  Eishi Asano; Csaba Juhász; Aashit Shah; Sandeep Sood; Harry T Chugani
Journal:  Brain       Date:  2009-03-13       Impact factor: 13.501

9.  Noninvasive predictors of subdural grid seizure localization in children with nonlesional focal epilepsy.

Authors:  Giridhar P Kalamangalam; Elia M Pestana Knight; Shyam Visweswaran; Ajay Gupta
Journal:  J Clin Neurophysiol       Date:  2013-02       Impact factor: 2.177

Review 10.  How to establish causality in epilepsy surgery.

Authors:  Eishi Asano; Erik C Brown; Csaba Juhász
Journal:  Brain Dev       Date:  2013-05-15       Impact factor: 1.961

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