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1.
Postoperative EEG and seizure outcome in temporal lobe epilepsy surgery.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
OBJECTIVE: To assess the prognostic value of scalp electroencephalogram (EEG) after epilepsy surgery, we investigated whether postoperative EEG abnormalities (interictal epileptiform discharges, IED; interictal slow activity, ISA) were associated with seizure outcome and other patient characteristics after resective surgery in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE). METHODS: Sixty-two patients with medically refractory TLE who underwent surgery were studied. Patients were categorized according to etiology (mesiotemporal sclerosis vs. tumors/cortical dysplasias); extent of surgical resection (extensive vs. limited); and amount of preoperative IED on wake EEG (oligospikers, <1 IED/h, vs. spikers). Patients were also classified as seizure-free (SF) or having persistent seizures/auras (not-SF) during follow up visits 1 month and 1 year after surgery. Preoperative 60-min interictal EEGs were evaluated for IED and ISA, and compared to postoperative wake EEGs. RESULTS: Seizures/auras persisted in 16/62 (25.8%) patients at 1 month and in 8/62 (12.9%) at 1 year follow up. ISA was not significantly related to outcome. Of 42 patients with EEG negative for IED at 1 month, 4 were not-SF; at 1 year, one of 44 such patients was not-SF. IED was significantly associated with seizure/aura persistence in patients categorized as mesiotemporal sclerosis and with extensive surgery. Oligospikers and spikers on preoperative EEG showed no differences in the postoperative seizure outcome, excellent in both cases; moreover, the presence of postoperative IEDs indicated auras/seizures persistence apart from the preoperative EEG spike frequency. CONCLUSIONS: Our study showed that the presence of IED of postoperatve EEG strongly indicates seizure/aura persistence. Therefore, serial EEGs should be included in postoperative follow up schedules as a crucial tool in evaluating seizure outcome.  相似文献   

2.

Objective

To evaluate the prognostic value of postoperative EEGs to estimate post anterior temporal lobectomy (ATL) seizure outcome.

Methods

We studied postoperative EEGs in 325 consecutive patients who had minimum five years of post-ATL followup. Interictal epileptiform discharges (IEDs) present only during sleep were classified as sleep IEDs. We defined favorable final-year outcome as no seizures during the final one year and favorable absolute-postoperative outcome as no seizures during the entire postoperative period.

Results

At mean follow-up of 7.3?±?1.8?years, 281 (86.5%) patients had favorable final-year outcome while 161 (49.5%) had favorable absolute-postoperative outcome. IEDs on three months and one year EEG were associated with unfavorable outcomes while IEDs at 7th day had no association with outcomes. Sleep record increased the yield of IEDs by 30% at each time-point without compromising predictive value. EEG at one year predicted the risk of seizure recurrence on drug withdrawal.

Conclusion

While EEG at three months and at one-year after ATL predicted seizure outcome, EEG at 7th day was not helpful. Sleep record increases the sensitivity of postoperative EEG without compromising specificity.

Significance

Both awake and sleep EEG provide useful information in postoperative period following ATL.  相似文献   

3.
It has not been established whether electroencephalography (EEG) is a contributing factor in predicting the outcome of surgery for epilepsy. We conducted a prospective study on 26 patients (M/F 14/12, age: 33 +/- 7.5 years, range 19-48) with mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE) who were followed for 2 years after surgery and who underwent routine EEG recordings 5.6 +/- 3 months (range 3-12) postoperatively. Interictal epileptiform activity (IEA) on the EEG was compared in 17 seizure-free patients to 9 patients with recurrent seizures. The two groups were similar in gender, age, febrile convulsions, trauma, family history, seizure frequency prior to surgery, epilepsy duration and number of antiepileptic drugs. Following surgery, 17 study patients (65%) became seizure free; 9 (35%) had seizure recurrence. Post-operative EEG recordings showed IEA in 8/26 study patients (31%), 3 of whom were from the seizure-free group (3/17, 18%); 5 had seizure recurrence (5/9, 56%) (p=0.078). IEAs in postoperative EEGs were less frequently demonstrated in patients who were seizure free, but the presence of postoperative IEAs does not preclude successful surgical outcome.  相似文献   

4.
Discontinuation of antiepileptic drugs after successful epilepsy surgery   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
Schiller Y  Cascino GD  So EL  Marsh WR 《Neurology》2000,54(2):346-349
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the frequency and risk factors for seizure recurrence subsequent to antiepileptic drug (AED) withdrawal in patients who underwent surgical treatment for intractable partial epilepsy and were rendered seizure-free. METHODS: The outcome of discontinuation of AED medication was studied retrospectively in 210 consecutive patients who were rendered seizure-free after epilepsy surgery performed between 1989 and 1993. RESULTS: Medical therapy was reduced in 96 patients and discontinued in 84 patients. The seizure recurrence rate after complete AED withdrawal was 14% and 36% at 2 and 5 years. In contrast, only 3% and 7% of the 30 patients who did not alter AED treatment after surgery had recurrent seizures in the same time intervals. After AED discontinuation, seizures tended to recur more often in patients with normal preoperative MRI studies compared with those with focal pathology. However, this difference did not reach significance. Intraoperative electrocorticography, extent of surgical resection, postoperative EEG, and seizure-free duration after surgery were not predictive of seizure outcome after AED withdrawal. CONCLUSIONS: AED withdrawal was associated with seizure recurrence in a significant portion of patients rendered seizure-free by epilepsy surgery. Patients with a normal preoperative MRI study showed a tendency for higher seizure recurrence, whereas the duration of seizure-free postoperative AED treatment interval did not significantly influence the seizure recurrence rate. These results will prove useful in counseling patients about discontinuing AED treatment after successful epilepsy surgery.  相似文献   

5.

Objective

To assess the prognostic value of postoperative EEG in patients surgically treated for drug-resistant extra-temporal lobe (ET) epilepsy.

Methods

We studied 63 consecutive patients with ET epilepsy who underwent epilepsy surgery and were followed up for at least 2 years (mean duration of follow-up 6.2 ± 2.3 years, range 2–12). Follow-up evaluations were performed 2, 12, and 24 months after surgery, and included standard EEG (at 2 months) and long-term video-EEG monitoring during both wakefulness and sleep (at 12 and 24 months). Seizure outcome was determined at each follow-up evaluation, and then at yearly intervals. Patients who were in Engel Class I at the last contact were classified as having a good outcome.

Results

Seizure outcome was good in 39 patients (62%). The presence of interictal epileptiform discharges (IED) in postoperative EEG at each time point was found to be associated with poor outcome. The strength of this association was greater for awake plus sleep recording as compared with awake recording alone. In a multiple regression model including all pre- and post-operative factors identified as predictors of outcome in univariate analysis, the presence of early (2 months after surgery) EEG epileptiform abnormalities was found to be independently associated with poor seizure outcome.

Conclusions

Postoperative IED may predict long-term outcome in patients undergoing resective surgery for ET epilepsy.

Significance

The increase in risk of unfavourable outcome associated with EEG epileptiform abnormalities detected as early as two months after surgery may have substantial practical importance. Serial postoperative EEGs including sleep recording may add further predictive power and help making decision about antiepileptic drug discontinuation.  相似文献   

6.
Purpose: Up to one‐half of epilepsy surgery patients will have at least one seizure after surgery. We aim to characterize the prognosis following a first postoperative seizure, and provide criteria allowing early identification of recurrent refractory epilepsy. Methods: Analyzing 915 epilepsy surgery patients operated on between 1990 and 2007, we studied 276 who had ≥1 seizure beyond the immediate postoperative period. The probability of subsequent seizures was calculated using survival analysis. Patients were divided into seizure‐free (no seizures for ≥1 year) and refractory (persistent seizures) and analyzed using multivariate regression analysis. Results: After a first seizure, 50% had a recurrence within 1 month and 77% within a year before the risk slowed down to additional 2–3% increments every two subsequent years. After a second seizure, 50% had a recurrence within 2 weeks, 78% within 2 months, and 83% within 6 months. Having both the first and second seizures within six postoperative months [odds ratio (OR) 4.04; 95% confidence interval (CI) 2.05–8.40; p = 0.0001], an unprovoked initial recurrence (OR 3.92; 95% CI 2.13–7.30; p < 0.0001), and ipsilateral spikes on a 6‐months postoperative electroencephalography (EEG) (OR 2.05; 95% CI 1.10–3.88; p = 0.025) predicted a poorer outcome, with 95% of patients who had all three risk factors becoming refractory. All patients with cryptogenic epilepsy and recurrent seizures developed refractoriness. Discussion: Seizures will recur in most patients who present with their first postoperative event, with one‐third eventually regaining seizure‐freedom. Etiology and early and unprovoked postoperative seizures with epileptiform activity on EEG at six postoperative months may predict recurrent medical refractoriness.  相似文献   

7.
PURPOSE: To determine whether a focal beta-frequency discharge at seizure onset on scalp EEG predicts outcome of frontal lobe epilepsy (FLE) surgery. METHODS: We identified 54 consecutive patients with intractable FLE who underwent epilepsy surgery between December 1987 and December 1996. A blind review of EEGs and magnetic resonance images (MRIs) was performed. Lesional epilepsy is defined as presence of an underlying structural abnormality on MRI. RESULTS: Overall, 28 (52%) patients were seizure free, with a mean follow-up of 46.5 months. Presence of a focal beta-frequency discharge at seizure onset on scalp EEG predicted seizure-free outcome in lesional (p = 0.02) and non-lesional (p = 0.01) epilepsy patients. At least 90% of patients who had either lesional or non-lesional epilepsy were seizure free if scalp EEG revealed a focal beta discharge at ictal onset. Moreover, logistic regression analysis showed that focal ictal beta pattern and completeness of lesion resection were independently predictive of seizure-free outcome. Ictal onset with lateralized EEG activity of any kind and postresection electrocorticographic spikes did not predict surgical outcome (p > 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: Only about 25% of FLE surgical patients have a focal beta-frequency discharge at seizure onset on scalp EEG. However, its presence is highly predictive of excellent postsurgical seizure control in either lesional or non-lesional FLE surgical patients.  相似文献   

8.
Malow BA  Selwa LM  Ross D  Aldrich MS 《Epilepsia》1999,40(11):1587-1592
PURPOSE: To determine the lateralizing value of interictal epileptiform discharges (IEDs) recorded during overnight sleep-EEG studies in temporal lobe epilepsy. Because IEDs are more prevalent in non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep than in wakefulness, overnight sleep-EEG recordings may contribute additional lateralizing information to the epilepsy surgery evaluation beyond daytime EEGs. METHODS: Twenty-four subjects with medically refractory temporal lobe epilepsy underwent continuous overnight sleep-EEG recordings. Subjects were seizure free > or =24 h before study and receiving stable doses of medication. The IED foci recorded on overnight studies were compared with daytime EEGs, interictal samples, and ictal recordings during long-term monitoring, brain magnetic resonance images (MRIs), and surgical outcome. RESULTS: (a) In all 24 subjects, including 13 without IEDs on daytime EEGs, temporal IEDs were present during NREM sleep and were exclusively or predominantly (>95%) unilateral in 15 and bitemporal in nine. (b) Unilateral NREM IEDs were concordant with surface or depth ictal-onset regions in 14 subjects, even if MRIs were normal (three subjects) or surface ictal-onset regions were bilateral (five subjects). Eleven of 12 subjects with unilateral concordant NREM IEDs who have undergone surgery are seizure free. (c) Bitemporal IEDs were associated with postoperative seizures in all subjects with normal MRIs or widespread MRI abnormalities. However, all subjects with bitemporal IEDs and MRI hippocampal abnormalities concordant with ictal-onset regions had good to excellent surgical outcomes. CONCLUSIONS: When combined with other investigations, IEDs recorded on overnight studies add prognostic data to the epilepsy surgery evaluation not provided by daytime EEGs.  相似文献   

9.
EEG and Seizure Outcome After Epilepsy Surgery   总被引:2,自引:2,他引:0  
Summary: The significance of the EEG after epilepsy surgery is not fully understood. We investigated the as- sociation between postoperative EEG abnormalities and persistent seizures after epilepsy surgery as they relate to pathologic lesions. Among 254 patients who underwent epilepsy surgery between 1987 and 1991, we identified 78 patients who had mesiotemporal sclerosis (MTS) and 47 patients who had low-grade brain tumors, all of whom had 6-to 18-month postoperative follow-up including EEG. Patients who had other pathology, multiple operations, callosotomy, or hemispherectomy, or who were aged <18 years or who had insufficient EEG data, were excluded. Patients were classified as having persistent seizures or being seizure-free since operation. EEG abnormalities were abstracted from EEG reports 6–18 months postoperatively. Seizures persisted in 24% of the MTS group and in 27% of the tumor group. Of those with normal EEGs, none of the MTS patients and only 1 of the tumor patients had persistent seizures (p = 0.03 for MTS and p = 0.42 for tumor). Epileptiform discharges and focal slowing were associated with seizure persistence in both groups, but to a significant extent only in the MTS group. In the MTS group, patients who had both epileptiform discharges and focal slowing were more likely to have persistent seizures than were those with either abnormality alone.  相似文献   

10.
We retrospectively identified 15 children ages 12 years and under with anticonvulsant resistant epilepsy who underwent a temporal lobectomy at Children's Hospital, Boston, between 1978 and 1993. Our aim was to study the long-term seizure outcome. Data pertaining to preoperative evaluation, electroencephalography (EEG), neuroimaging, surgery, seizure outcome, and postoperative complications were reviewed. Only patients followed for more than 12 months were included. The average duration of follow-up was 57 months. At the last visit, 47% (7 of 15) of the children were seizure free or only had auras: another 33% (5 of 15) had > 90% reduction in seizure frequency. Three patients had < 90% seizure reduction. Four cases were initially seizure free but had subsequent recurrence between 11 and 28 months after the epilepsy surgery. Factors associated with a good outcome include exclusively focal EEG discharges or an imaging suggestive of a low-grade tumor; factors associated with a poor outcome include generalized EEG discharges and a normal magnetic resonance image. Temporal lobectomy is useful in the treatment of early childhood drug-resistant partial epilepsy, but long-term follow-up is necessary as late seizure recurrence may occur up to 28 months after surgery.  相似文献   

11.
Purpose: Outcomes following unilobar surgeries for refractory epilepsy have been well described. However, little is known about long‐term seizure outcomes following multilobar resections. The aim of the current study was to identify long‐term seizure control and predictors of seizure recurrence in this patient population. Methods: Records of patients who underwent multilobar epilepsy surgery at the Cleveland Clinic between 1994 and 2010 were retrospectively reviewed. A postoperative follow‐up of at least 6 months was required. Patients were classified as seizure free if they achieved an Engel class I at last follow‐up. Long‐term chances of seizure freedom were illustrated using a survival analysis, and predictors of recurrence were identified using Cox proportional hazard modeling. Key Findings: Sixty‐three patients with medically intractable epilepsy underwent multilobar surgical resections during the study period (mean follow‐up of 4.6 years). Predominant resection types included extended occipital (temporoparietooccipital, parietooccipital, temporooccipital: 57%), frontotemporal (21%), and temporoparietal (17%). Mean age at surgery was 21.4 years and mean age at seizure onset was 10.1 years. Fifty‐six percent of the patients underwent extraoperative invasive electroencephalography (EEG) evaluations. At 6 postoperative months, 71% (95% confidence interval (CI) 65–77) were seizure‐free (SF), 64% (CI 58–70) were SF at 1 year, 52% (CI 46–59) were SF at 5 years, and 41% (CI 32–50) remained SF at 10 years. Forty‐one patients had at least one breakthrough seizure after surgery (median timing of recurrence 6.1 months), with an Engel class 1 achieved again by last follow‐up in 12 of these 41 cases. Nine patients required a reoperation. Patients who underwent extended occipital/posterior quadrant resections had more favorable outcomes as compared to the other groups. With multivariate analysis, the type of resection (p = 0.03), preoperative auras (p = 0.03), an incomplete resection (0.03), and the presence of postoperative spikes (p = 0.0003) correlated with seizure recurrence. The risk of seizure recurrence for an incomplete resection was 2.3 (CI 1.53–3.36), preoperative aura 2.3 (CI 1.34–3.87), and postoperative spikes on surface EEG 2.5 (CI 1.29–4.71). Significance: A favorable outcome can be achieved in 41% of patients undergoing multilobar resections for epilepsy surgery at 10 years of follow‐up. Close to one‐third of patients who have breakthrough seizures after surgery are able to regain seizure freedom by last follow‐up. Predictors of recurrence include resection type (frontotemporal and parietotemporal resections did worse), presence of preoperative aura, an incomplete surgical resection, and the presence of postoperative interictal discharges on EEG.  相似文献   

12.
S K Lee  K K Kim  K S Hong  J Y Kim  C K Chung 《Seizure》2000,9(5):336-339
We investigated 109 patients who received anterior temporal lobectomy for intractable mTLE by post-operative follow-up for at least 11/2 years. We reviewed pre-operative 2-hour interictal EEGs, counted interictal epileptiform discharges (IEDs), and compared the lateralization of IEDs with the side of surgery and surgical outcome. Twenty of 22 patients who had no spikes and 44 of 51 who had unitemporal spikes became seizure free after surgical resection. The correct lateralization of the epileptogenic side was possible in 90. 9% of the patients with unitemporal IEDs. In 12 seizure-free patients of 15 patients with less than 70% predominance of IED in one temporal lobe, the positive predictive value of the lateralization was 41.7%. In 16 seizure-free patients of 21 with more than 70% preponderance of IED in one lobe, the positive predictive value was 81.3%. Surgical outcome of patients with unitemporal and bitemporal IEDs were not significantly different. Interictal scalp EEG can be used as a lateralizing tool in mTLE when the temporal IEDs appear with more than 70% preponderance in one side. Although the presence of bitemporal IEDs often causes confusion in terms of the correct lateralization, it does not affect the surgical outcome.  相似文献   

13.
Preoperative and postoperative cognitive and memory functions, psychiatric outcome, and EEGs were evaluated in 32 epileptic patients who underwent temporal lobe surgery. The presence and location of preoperative slow wave focus in routine EEG predicted memory functions of the non-resected side after surgery. Neuropsychological tests of the function of the frontal lobes also showed improvement. Moreover, psychiatric ratings showed that seizure free patients had significantly less affective symptoms postoperatively than those who were still exhibiting seizures. After temporal lobectomies, successful outcome in postoperative memory functions can be achieved in patients with unilateral slow wave activity in preoperative EEGs. This study suggests a new role for routine EEG in preoperative evaluation of patients with temporal lobe epilepsy.  相似文献   

14.
Purpose: In planning epilepsy surgery, it is important to be able to assess the likelihood of success of surgery for each patient so that the possible risk and benefit can be properly considered. In this study, functional connectivity was investigated as a means for predicting surgical outcome from the preoperative functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) of epilepsy patients. Methods: Resting‐state simultaneous electroencephalography (EEG)–fMRI data were collected from 18 patients with intractable epilepsy before surgery and from 14 healthy subjects. For each patient, EEG‐spike correlated fMRI analysis was performed and an activation cluster that overlapped the most with the planned resection area for each patient was chosen as the seed for the functional connectivity analysis. After the functional connectivity maps were computed, laterality indices of functional connectivity were contrasted between patients who had seizures after surgeries (seizure‐recurrence group) and those who did not have them for at least a year (seizure‐free group). Key Findings: Patients in the seizure‐recurrence group had less‐lateralized functional connectivity than patients in the seizure‐free group (t16 = 2.3, after control subtracted and Fisher transformed, p < 0.05, two‐tailed). Significance: This study suggests the potential for using preoperative fMRI connectivity analysis as a predictive outcome measure. If confirmed by further research, a high laterality will be an important addition to the other predictors of better surgical outcome such as febrile seizures, mesial temporal sclerosis, tumors, abnormal MRI, and EEG/MRI concordance.  相似文献   

15.
We retrospectively studied EEGs performed 1 week, 3 months, and 1 year after surgery (lesionectomy or lesion resection with corticectomy) in 24 patients with extratemporal lesional epilepsy who had a mean duration of follow-up of 2.5 years. All patients had intractable partial seizures and underwent a comprehensive presurgical evaluation including long-term EEG monitoring. Twenty of the 24 patients had interictal epileptiform activity (IEA) identified on the preoperative sleep and awake EEG recordings. The presence of IEA 1 year after surgery was associated with recurrent seizure activity (p < 0.05). The postoperative EEG recordings, however, revealed no IEA in the two patients with persistent seizures who had no epileptiform abnormality on the preoperative study. The extent of cortical resection appeared to have no significant effect on the recording of IEA after surgery. One-year postoperative EEG recordings are prognostically useful in patients with extratemporal lesional epilepsy who undergo surgical treatment.  相似文献   

16.
Our aim is to investigate seizure outcome and prognostic factors after pure frontal lobe epilepsy (FLE) surgery. We retrospectively studied the operative outcome in 97 consecutive adult patients who underwent resective surgery for intractable partial epilepsy between 1991 and 2005. Based on Kaplan-Meier, the probability of an Engel Class I outcome was found to be 54.6% (95% CI 44-64) at 6 months, 49.5% (95% CI 39.3-59.6) at 2 years, 47% (CI 34-59) at 5 years and 41.9% (CI 23.5-60.3) at 10 years. If the patient was seizure free at 2-year follow-up, the probability of remaining seizure free up to 10 years was 86% (95% CI 76-98). For 13.6% of the patients a running down of seizures could be shown. Factors predictive of poor long-term outcome were incomplete resection, using of subdural grids, IED in follow-up EEG, tonic seizures and an unspecific aura or a postoperative aura. Factors predictive of good long-term outcome were the presence of a well-circumscribed lesion in preoperative MRI, ipsilateral IED in preoperative EEG, surgery before age of 30 and short epilepsy duration prior to surgery. In the multivariate analysis, preoperative well-circumscribed lesion in MRI predicts seizure remission whereas persistent postoperative auras predict seizure relapse. FLE surgery should depend on restrictive patient selection to assure favorable outcome.  相似文献   

17.
Value of the early electroencephalogram after a first unprovoked seizure.   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Studies on the predictive value of the electroencephalogram (EEG) concerning the risk of seizure recurrence have shown contradictory results. We prospectively studied the predictive value of the standard EEG and EEG with sleep deprivation for seizure relapse in adult patients presenting with a first unprovoked seizure. EEGs were performed on 157 adult patients within the first 48 hours of the first seizure. Additional EEGs with sleep deprivation were obtained in 60 cases. The standard EEG was abnormal in 70.7% and significantly associated with an increased risk of seizure recurrence [risk ratio 4.5, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.8; 11.3, p=0.001]. Subgroup analysis revealed the highest recurrence rates for patients with focal epileptiform activity (risk ratio 2.2, CI 1.2; 4.2, p=0.01). EEGs with sleep deprivation were abnormal in 48.3% of all cases and revealed epileptiform discharges in 13.3% of the patients who had no epileptiform activity in the standard EEG. Routine EEG revealed abnormalities in 60 of 94 patients who presented with normal neurologic status on admission. Further neuroradiological examinations detected previously unknown brain lesions in 19 of these cases, particularly cerebrovascular disease (CVD, n=7), brain tumors (n=6), and posttraumatic scars (n=4). In conclusion, the EEG is important for the early detection of focal nonepileptic and epileptic abnormalities after a first unprovoked seizure in adult patients and may provide valuable information on previously unknown disorders, particularly CVD and cerebral tumors. The abnormal EEG is a highly significant predictor for seizure recurrence. An additional EEG with sleep deprivation is helpful in cases when standard EEG does not reveal epileptiform discharges.  相似文献   

18.
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate seizure outcome following epilepsy surgery for patients with temporal lobe epilepsy and evaluate is gender and race/ethnicity influence it. METHODS: Data were obtained from the discharge database of the University of Alabama at Birmingham, Epilepsy Center, between 1985 and 2001. The sample consisted of all patients with a primary diagnosis of medically intractable temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) who underwent anterior temporal lobectomy. Seizure recurrence was tabulated at 7 days, 2 months, 6 months, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 years following surgery. Logistic regression analysis was used to model the presence of seizure recurrence after anterior temporal lobectomy for all patients. Kaplan-Meier analysis was done to obtain estimates and 95% CIs of seizure freedom from baseline. Baseline variables--age at surgery, age at seizure onset, sex, side of resection, immediate postoperative seizures, and pathology results--were assessed as potential predictors of each outcome by comparing the survival curves within each variable with a log rank test. RESULTS: Three hundred sixty-eight patients underwent surgical treatment for TLE, mean age of 30.2 years. Thirty-five patients were African American, 43% were men. Immediate postoperative seizures were seen in 23 patients, while seizure recurrence occurred in 27.3% patients within a year after surgery, and in 33.6% within 6 years. Logistic regression results showed no differences between African Americans and whites, between males and females. The occurrence of immediate postoperative seizures was a strong predictor of late seizure recurrence only at 1 year after surgery. CONCLUSIONS: The occurrence of seizures in the immediate postoperative period is a strong predictor of later seizure recurrence. Sex and race/ethnicity do not appear to be predictors of long-term outcome following surgery for temporal lobe epilepsy.  相似文献   

19.
PURPOSE: Very little reliable information is available regarding the role of anterior temporal lobectomy (ATL), optimal presurgical evaluation strategy, post-ATL seizure outcome, and the factors that predict the outcome in patients with medically refractory temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) and normal high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). To be cost-effective, epilepsy surgery centers in developing countries will have to select candidates for epilepsy surgery by using the locally available technology and expertise. METHODS: We reviewed the electroclinical and pathological characteristics and seizure outcome of 17 patients who underwent ATL for medically refractory TLE after being selected for ATL based on a noninvasive selection protocol without the aid of positron emission tomography (PET) or single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), despite a normal preoperative high-resolution MRI. RESULTS: Seven (41%) patients achieved an excellent seizure outcome; five of them were totally seizure free. An additional five (29%) patients had >75% reduction in seizure frequency. The following pre-ATL factors predicted an excellent outcome: antecedent history of febrile seizures, strictly unilateral anterior temporal interictal epileptiform discharges (IEDs), and concordant type 1 ictal EEG pattern. All the five patients with pathologically verified hippocampal formation neuronal loss were seizure free. The presence of posterior temporal, bilateral temporal, and generalized IEDs portended unfavorable post-ATL seizure outcome. CONCLUSIONS: A subgroup of patients destined to have an excellent post-ATL outcome can be selected from MRI-negative TLE patients by using history and scalp-recorded interictal and ictal EEG data. The attributes of these patients are antecedent history of febrile seizures, strictly unilateral anterior IEDs, and concordant type 1 ictal EEG pattern.  相似文献   

20.
Purpose:   To investigate the longitudinal seizure outcome and identify potential prognostic indicators following posterior cortex epilepsy (PCE) surgery.
Methods:   We reviewed patients who underwent a parietal, occipital, or parietooccipital resections between 1994 and 2006, using survival analysis and multivariate regression with Cox proportional hazard modeling. A favorable outcome was defined as Engel Class I at last follow-up.
Results:   Fifty-seven patients were identified with a mean follow-up of 3.3 years (range 1–12 years). The estimated chance of seizure freedom (SF) was 73.1% at 6 postoperative months, 68.5% at 1 year, 65.8% at between 2 and 5 years, and 54.8% at 6 years and beyond. Most recurrences (75%) occurred within the first 6 postoperative months. Parietal resections had a worse outcome than occipital or parietooccipital resections (52% SF vs. 89% and 93%, respectively, at 5 years). Independent predictors of recurrence included an epilepsy etiology other than tumor or dysplasia [risk ratio (RR) 2.29], limiting resection to a lesionectomy (RR 2.10), having ipsilateral temporal spiking on preoperative scalp electroencephalography (EEG) (RR 2.06), or any ipsilateral spiking on postoperative EEG (RR 2.70) (Log likelihood-ratio test p < 0.0001). Only 40–50% of patients with a poor outcome predictor were SF at 5 postoperative years as opposed to about 80% otherwise. In surgical failures, recurrent seizure frequency was related directly to baseline seizure frequency and to the presence of ipsilateral spiking on postoperative EEG.
Discussion:   These data highlight favorable long-term outcomes following PCE surgery. Limited surgical resection and diffuse baseline epileptogenicity may be important predictors of seizure recurrence.  相似文献   

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