| Literature DB >> 30497135 |
P Sarat Chandra1,2, Heri Subianto1,2, Jitin Bajaj1,2, Shabari Girishan1,2, Ramesh Doddamani1, Bhargavi Ramanujam3,2, Mahendra Singh Chouhan4, Ajay Garg5, Madhavi Tripathi6, Chandrasekhar S Bal6, Chitra Sarkar7, Rekha Dwivedi3, Savita Sapra8, Manjari Tripathi3,2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVEEndoscope-assisted hemispherotomy (EH) has emerged as a good alternative option for hemispheric pathologies with drug-resistant epilepsy.METHODSThis was a prospective observational study. Parameters measured included primary outcome measures (frequency, severity of seizures) and secondary outcomes (cognition, behavior, and quality of life). Blood loss, operating time, complications, and hospital stay were also taken into account. A comparison was made between the open hemispherotomy (OH) and endoscopic techniques performed by the senior author.RESULTSOf 59 cases (42 males), 27 underwent OH (8 periinsular, the rest vertical) and 32 received EH. The mean age was 8.65 ± 5.41 years (EH: 8.6 ± 5.3 years; OH: 8.6 ± 5.7 years). Seizure frequency per day was 7 ± 5.9 (EH: 7.3 ± 4.6; OH: 15.0 ± 6.2). Duration of disease (years since first episode) was 3.92 ± 1.24 years (EH: 5.2 ± 4.3; OH: 5.8 ± 4.5 years). Number of antiepileptic drugs per patient was 3.9 ± 1.2 (EH: 4.2 ± 1.2; OH: 3.8 ± 0.98). Values for the foregoing variables are expressed as the mean ± SD. Pathologies included the following: postinfarct encephalomalacia in 19 (EH: 11); Rasmussen's syndrome in 14 (EH: 7); hemimegalencephaly in 12 (EH: 7); hemispheric cortical dysplasia in 7 (EH: 4); postencephalitis sequelae in 6 (EH: 2); and Sturge-Weber syndrome in 1 (EH: 1). The mean follow-up was 40.16 ± 17.3 months. Thirty-nine of 49 (79.6%) had favorable outcomes (International League Against Epilepsy class I and II): in EH the total was 19/23 (82.6%) and in OH it was 20/26 (76.9%). There was no difference in the primary outcome between EH and OH (p = 0.15). Significant improvement was seen in the behavioral/quality of life performance, but not in IQ scores in both EH and OH (p < 0.01, no intergroup difference). Blood loss (p = 0.02) and hospital stay (p = 0.049) were less in EH.CONCLUSIONSEH was as effective as the open procedure in terms of primary and secondary outcomes. It also resulted in less blood loss and a shorter postoperative hospital stay.Entities:
Keywords: AED = antiepileptic drug; CBCL = Child Behavior Checklist; EEG = electroencephalography; EH = endoscope-assisted hemispherotomy; HASS = Hague seizure severity; ILAE = International League Against Epilepsy; OH = open hemispherotomy; PedsQL = Pediatric Quality of Life; QOL = quality of life; endoscopic; epilepsy; hemimegalencephaly; hemispherotomy; minimally invasive
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30497135 DOI: 10.3171/2018.8.PEDS18131
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurosurg Pediatr ISSN: 1933-0707 Impact factor: 2.375