We studied 74 consecutive patients with temporal lobe epilepsy who were treated surgically and in whom the volumes of mesial temporal structures were determined preoperatively by magnetic resonance imaging. We divided the patients into three groups according to the volumetric findings: unilateral (63.5% of the patients), bilateral (23%), or no atrophy (13.5%) of the amygdala-hippocampal formation. Two distinct surgical approaches were used: selective amygdalohippocampectomy (n = 37) or anterior temporal lobe resection (n = 37). Outcome was assessed at least 1 year after surgery, according to Engel's modified classification. Patients with unilateral mesial temporal atrophy had significantly better results compared with the other two groups (p < 0.001): We found excellent results (class I or II outcome) in 93.6% of the patients with unilateral atrophy, in 61.7% of those with bilateral atrophy, and in 50% of the group with no significant atrophy of mesial temporal structures. The two different surgical techniques were equally effective, regardless of the pattern of atrophy. In conclusion, magnetic resonance volumetric studies in temporal lobe epilepsy proved to be an important preoperative prognostic tool for surgical treatment, but they did not provide guidance for selecting one surgical approach compared to the other.
Summary:Purpose: To examine the intralimbic localization and morphology of mesial temporal seizure onsets and to correlate the findings with patterns of initial seizure spread and the presence or absence of clinical manifestations.Methods: Eighteen patients with temporal lobe epilepsy were investigated with intracranial depth electrodes implanted in the amygdala (AM), anterior hippocampus (HP), and parahippocampal gyrus (PH). Focal and regional ictal-onset morphologies were classified as rhythmic limbic spiking <2 Hz (RLS), spike-and-wave activity >2 Hz (S/W), rhythmic polyspike activity >13 Hz (RPS), and rhythmic sharp activity <13 Hz (RS).Results: Onset morphologies in 389 total seizures (260 regional + 129 focal) were 50% RPS, 35% RS, 11% RLS, and 4% S/W. Focal AM or HP onsets (30% and 58% of focal onsets, respectively) were more likely to show RLS, whereas RPS was more common in regional onsets. Most patients showed two or more different morphologies and focal onsets at more than one ipsilateral limbic site. Seizure propagation and clinical manifestations were significantly more common with AM or PH onsets (both 67% clinical seizures): only 23% of focal HP onsets resulted in clinical seizures.Conclusions: (a) There is substantial inter-and intrapatient variability in the morphology and localization of mesial temporal seizure onsets, which suggests that the epileptogenic temporolimbic system may be conceptualized as a dynamic network containing a multiplicity of potential ictal generators; (b) Seizures beginning in the AM or PH are more likely to propagate and give rise to clinical manifestations than are focal-onset HP seizures, which suggests that inhibitory circuits within the HP may function to prevent seizure spread.
Epilepsy is a potentially devastating brain disorder characterized by a predisposition to spontaneous epileptic seizures. In patients with medically refractory epilepsy, new non-pharmacological therapeutic approaches may be considered. In this scenario, palliative surgery such as vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) or deep brain stimulation (DBS) may be indicated in a subset of patients. In this paper we make recommendations for the use of VNS and DBS in patients in Brazil with refractory epilepsy.
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