After surgery, seizure frequency and developmental quotient improved. Developmental status before surgery predicted developmental function after surgery. Patients who were operated on at younger age and with epileptic spasms showed the largest increase in developmental quotient after surgery.
Background-Impairments in executive cognitive control, including a reduced ability to inhibit prepotent responses, have been reported in autism spectrum disorders (ASD). These deficits may underlie patterns of repetitive behaviors associated with the disorder.
These results indicate that onset of intractable epilepsy within the first 24 months of life is a significant risk factor for MR, especially if seizures occur daily. The risk based on early age at seizure onset appeared independent of etiology and persisted within subgroups of patients with focal malformation of cortical development, tumor, or hippocampal sclerosis. Prospective studies will be important to clarify whether early surgical intervention may reduce the risk for subsequent MR in carefully selected infants.
Summary:Purpose: Numerous studies have demonstrated changes in cognitive, memory, and language functioning in adults and adolescents after temporal lobectomy, yet little information is available regarding neuropsychological outcome in preadolescent children.Methods: We studied pre-and postoperative neuropsychological test results from 14 children who underwent temporal lobe resection for intractable epilepsy at age 7-12 years (mean 9.4 years).Results: Thirteen patients (93%) had no seizures or less than one seizure a year at follow-up 23-48 months (mean 34 months) after operation. Postoperative neuropsychological testing was performed 6-9 months (mean 7 months) after surgery in 13 patients and 36 months after the first operation in 1 patient who underwent two-stage resection of a tumor. Verbal, Performance, and Full Scale IQ were initially in the lowaverage range, with no significant change across the pre-and postoperative evaluations. Immediate verbal memory performance decreased significantly in children who initially performed above the median preoperatively and tended to decrease in children who had left rather than right temporal lobe resection. Significant postoperative decreases in delayed memory scores were independent of preoperative ability or side of resection.Conclusions: Our small study suggests vulnerability to postoperative decline in immediate verbal memory scores in preadolescent children who have higher baseline immediate memory function or undergo left rather than right temporal lobe resection, similar to that observed in adolescents in adults. The entire group exhibited a statistically significant decrease in delayed verbal memory. Study of larger series of patients will be important to clarify further the short-and long-term risks and benefits of temporal lobe resection in childhood.
Context Studying sensorimotor and neurocognitive impairments in unaffected family members of individuals with autism may help identify familial pathophysiological mechanisms associated with the disorder. Objective To determine whether atypical sensorimotor or neurocognitive characteristics associated with autism are present in first-degree relatives of individuals with autism. Design Case-control comparison of neurobehavioral functions. Setting University medical center. Participants Fifty-seven first-degree relatives of individuals with autism and 40 age-, sex-, and IQ-matched healthy control participants (aged 8–54 years). Main Outcome Measures Oculomotor tests of sensorimotor responses (saccades and smooth pursuit); procedural learning and response inhibition; neuropsychological tests of motor, memory, and executive functions; and psychological measures of social behavior, communication skills, and obsessive-compulsive behaviors. Results On eye movement testing, family members demonstrated saccadic hypometria, reduced steady-state pursuit gain, and a higher rate of voluntary response inhibition errors relative to controls. They also showed lateralized deficits in procedural learning and open-loop pursuit gain (initial 100 milliseconds of pursuit) and increased variability in the accuracy of large-amplitude saccades that were confined to rightward movements. In neuropsychological studies, only executive functions were impaired relative to those of controls. Family members reported more communication abnormalities and obsessive-compulsive behaviors than controls. Deficits across oculomotor, neuropsychological, and psychological domains were relatively independent from one another. Conclusions Family members of individuals with autism demonstrate oculomotor abnormalities implicating pontocerebellar and frontostriatal circuits and left-lateralized alterations of frontotemporal circuitry and striatum. The left-lateralized alterations have not been identified in other neuropsychiatric disorders and are of interest given atypical brain lateralization and language development associated with the disorder. Similar oculomotor deficits have been reported in individuals with autism, suggesting that they may be familial and useful for studies of neurophysiological and genetic mechanisms in autism.
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