This approach can help to identify both primary and secondary epileptogenic zones in young TSC patients with multiple tubers. Multiple or bilateral seizure foci are not necessarily a contraindication to surgery. Long-term follow-up will determine whether this approach has durable effects.
Summary:Multicenter, retrospective analysis of 70 subjects with TSC following surgery for relief of epilepsy revealed significant associations between younger age at seizure onset, present/prior history of infantile spasms, interictal focality (bilateral versus unilateral), and absence of residual postoperative predominant tuber, and poorer postoperative outcome (p < 0.01). Ictal multifocality, mental retardation, and discordant EEG and MRI data showed a negative trend toward outcome, but were not significant.
Summary:Purpose: Functional mapping of eloquent cortex with electrical neurostimulation is used both intra-and extraoperatively to tailor resections. In pediatric patients, however, functional mapping studies frequently fail to localize language. Wada testing has also been reported to be less sensitive in children.Methods: Thirty children (4.7 -14.9 years) and 18 adult controls (18-59 years) who underwent extraoperative language mapping via implanted subdural electrodes at the NYU Comprehensive Epilepsy Center were included in the study. Ten children and 14 adults underwent preoperative Wada testing. Success of the procedures was defined as the identification of at least one language site by neurostimulation mapping and determination of hemispheric language dominance on the Wada test.Results: In children younger than 10.2 years, cortical stimulation identified language cortex at a lower rate than was seen in children older than 10.2 years and in adults (p < 0.05). This threshold, demonstrated by survival and χ 2 analysis, was sharply defined in our data set. Additionally, Wada testing was more likely to be successful than was extraoperative mapping in this younger age group (p < 0.05).Conclusions: Analysis of our series demonstrates that language cortex is less likely to be identified in children younger than 10 years, suggesting that alternatives to the current methods of cortical electrical stimulation, particularly the use of preoperative language lateralization, may be required in this age group.
Medical therapy is the mainstay for epilepsy, with most patients well controlled on a single antiepileptic drug (AED). In this non-refractory group, many patients have medication side effects and occasional seizures. Approximately 30% of patients with partial epilepsy and 25% of patients with generalized epilepsy are not well controlled on medications. These patients are often receiving multiple AEDs, with disabling seizures and side effects. Although second-generation AEDs are safer and better tolerated than the older AEDs, there are scant data to support significant advantages in efficacy. In VA studies with older AEDS, therapy with two AEDs improved seizure control in 40% of patients but seizure freedom was achieved in only 9%. A meta-analysis of the second-generation AEDs used as adjunctive therapies shows that 12% to 29% of patients had a 50% or greater reduction in seizure frequency. Surgery and the vagus nerve stimulator provide important therapeutic options in patients whose seizures are not controlled by AEDs. Special considerations about epilepsy care must be made in pediatric populations, those with developmental delays, women, and the elderly.
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