User:Karmattol/Epilepsy Surgery

Surgical treatment

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Epilepsy surgery is an option for patients whose seizures remain resistant to treatment with anticonvulsant medications who also have symptomatic localization-related epilepsy; a focal abnormality that can be located and therefore removed. The goal for these procedures is total control of epileptic seizures [1], although anticonvulsant medications may still be required. [2]

The evaluation for epilepsy surgery is designed to locate the "epileptic focus" (the location of the epileptic abnormality) and to determine if resective surgery will affect normal brain function. Physicians will also confirm the diagnosis of epilepsy to make sure that spells arise from epilepsy (as opposed to non-epileptic seizures). The evaluation typically includes neurological examination, routine EEG, neuroimaging such as MRI, Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), positron emission tomography (PET), neuropsychological evaluation, Long-term video-EEG monitoring, and intracarotid sodium amobarbital test (Wada test). Some centers also use functional MRI or Magnetoencephalography (MEG) as supplementary tests.

Certain lesions require Long-term video-EEG monitoring with the use of intracranial electrodes if noninvasive testing was inadequate to identify the epileptic focus or distinguish the surgical target from normal brain tissue and function. Brain mapping by the technique of cortical electrical stimulation or Electrocorticography are other procedures used in the process of invasive testing in some patients.

The most common surgeries are the resection of lesions like tumors or arteriovenous malformations which, in the process of treating the underlying lesion, often result in control of epileptic seizures caused by these lesions.

Other lesions are more subtle and feature epilepsy as the main or sole symptom. The most common form of intractable epilepsy in these disorders in adults is temporal lobe epilepsy with hippocampal sclerosis, and the most common type of epilepsy surgery is the anterior temporal lobectomy, or the removal of the front portion of the temporal lobe including the amygdala and hippocampus. Some neurosurgeons recommend selective amygdalahippocampectomy because of possible benefits in postoperative memory or language function. Surgery for temporal lobe epilepsy is effective, durable, and results in decreased health care costs. [3][4]. Despite the efficacy of epilepsy surgery, some patients decide not to undergo surgery owing to fear or the uncertainty of having a brain operation.

Palliative surgery for epilepsy is intended to reduce the frequency or severity of seizures. Examples are callosotomy or commissurotomy to prevent seizures from generalizing (spreading to involve the entire brain), which results in a loss of consciousness. This procedure can therefore prevent injury due to the person falling to the ground after losing consciousness. It is performed only when the seizures cannot be controlled by other means. Multiple subpial transection can also be used to decrease the spread of seizures across the cortex especially when the epileptic focus is located near important functional areas of the cortex. Resective surgery can be considered palliative if it is undertaken with the expectation that it will reduce but not eliminate seizures.

Hemispherectomy involves removal or a functional disconnection of most or all of one half of the cerebrum. It is reserved for people suffering from the most catastrophic epilepsies, such as those due to Rasmussen syndrome. If the surgery is performed on very young patients (2-5 years old), the remaining hemisphere may acquire some rudimentary motor control of the ipsilateral body; in older patients, paralysis results on the side of the body opposite to the part of the brain that was removed. Because of these and other side effects it is usually reserved for patients who have exhausted other treatment options.

  1. ^ Birbeck GL, Hays RD, Cui X, Vickrey BG. (2002). "Seizure reduction and quality of life improvements in people with epilepsy". Epilepsia. 43: 535–538.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ Berg AT, Langfitt JT, Spencer SS, Vickrey BG. (2007). "Stopping antiepileptic drugs after epilepsy surgery: a survey of U.S. epilepsy center neurologists". Epilepsy Behav. 10: 219–222.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ Kelley K, Theodore WH (2005). "Prognosis 30 years after temporal lobectomy". Neurology. 64 (11): 1974–6.
  4. ^ Wiebe S, Blume WT, Girvin JP, Eliasziw M. (2001). "A randomized, controlled trial of surgery for temporal-lobe epilepsy". N Engl J Med. 345: 311–318.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)