A new concept for transcutaneous vagus nerve stimulation for control of partial onset seizures is described. The rationale for the application of this innovative noninvasive method is discussed.
SUMMARYObjective: To determine the clinical characteristics, surgical challenges, and outcome in children younger than 3 years of age undergoing epilepsy surgery in Canada. Methods: Retrospective data on patients younger than age 3 years who underwent epilepsy surgery at multiple centers across Canada from January 1987 to September 2005 were collected and analyzed. Results: There were 116 patients from eight centers. Seizure onset was in the first year of life in 82% %, and mean age at first surgery was 15.8 months (1-35 months). Second surgeries were done in 27 patients, and a third surgery in 6. Etiologies were malformations of cortical development (57), tumor (22), Sturge-Weber syndrome (19), infarct (8), and other (10). Surgeries comprised 40 hemispheric operations, 33 cortical resections, 35 lesionectomies, 7 temporal lobectomies, and one callosotomy. There was one surgical mortality. The most common surgical complications (151 operations in 116 patients) were infection (17) and aseptic meningitis in 13. Of 107 patients with seizure outcome assessed more than one year postoperatively, 72 (67.3%) were seizure free (Engel I), 15(14%) had >90% improvement (Engel II), 12 had >50% improvement (Engel III), and 8 did not benefit from surgery (Engel IV). Development improved in 55.3% after surgery. Conclusion: Epilepsy surgery in children younger than 3 years of age is relatively safe and is effective in controlling seizures. Very young age is not a contraindication to surgery in children with refractory epilepsy, and early surgery may impact development positively.
In a prospective study 76 children were divided into three groups on the basis of severity of head injury as defined by the Glasgow Coma Scale and duration of increased intracranial pressure. The children were administered a neuropsychological test battery and behavioural ratings were made by parents and teachers at three intervals: time of hospital discharge and 3 and 9 months post-initial testing. There were cognitive deficits related to severity of injury with the greatest difference in abilities observed between the severe and the other two groups. The greatest differences in skills were on the Performance IQ and timed tests of visual-motor speed and co-ordination. The greatest improvement in skills occurred in the first 3 months post-injury. Several children in coma for up to 4 weeks were able to obtain normal IQ scores. In the mild and moderate injury groups very few had behavioural change while in the severe group approximately 90% had one learning or adjustment difficulty and 40% had three or more problems.
Mean PFV values were found to be smaller in pediatric CMI patients than control patients; this complements earlier studies in adults and supports the present theory concerning the pathophysiological mechanism of CMI. Subtle morphometric differences among asymptomatic and symptomatic patients aged 0-9 years stress the importance of monitoring asymptomatic patients for the onset of symptoms in their adult years. Symptom development in CMI is likely multifactorial and is much more extensive than the degree of cerebellar tonsillar herniation.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.