Vagus nerve stimulation for epilepsy: a review. |
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Authors: | C D Binnie |
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Affiliation: | Guy’s, King’s and St. Thomas’s School of Medicine, King’s College Hospital, Denmark Hill, London SE5 9RS, UK |
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Abstract: | Vagus nerve stimulation is an empirically based method for treatment of epilepsy by repeated stimulation of the left vagus nerve through implanted electrodes. Despite studies in animals and man, which show changes in brain electrophysiology, metabolism and neurochemistry, the mode of action remains unknown. Clinical testing has presented methodological challenges, as it is difficult to assess under double blind conditions a treatment which requires surgery and produces a sensation every time the stimulator comes on. This has nevertheless been successfully addressed in parallel design, controlled trials comparing high and low stimulation schedules. These have been performed in adults with medically intractable partial seizures, and demonstrated efficacy, safety and good tolerability. Efficacy, both in the controlled trials and in numerous reports arising from the considerable post-marketing experience is modest. Some 30% of patients achieve a 50% seizure reduction after 3 months of treatment, but this proportion progressively increases to about 50% after 18 months. Side-effects comprise: discomfort in the face or neck when the stimulator is activated, coughing, breathlessness on exertion and hoarseness of voice. All are related to intensity of stimulation and rapidly habituate in most subjects. In those patients who respond, a stimulus level can therefore generally be found which is acceptable to the subject. No indication other than refractory partial seizures in adults has been the subject of controlled trials, but post-marketing experience and uncontrolled reports indicate comparable efficacy and safety in a wide range of epilepsies, partial and generalized, idiopathic, cryptogenic, or symptomatic, in patients of all ages. |
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