The use of scheduled atypical analgesics such as tramadol in addition to narcotics with acetaminophen for the management of postoperative pain after craniotomy may provide better pain control, decrease the side effects associated with narcotic pain medications, encourage earlier postoperative ambulation, and reduce total hospitalization costs.
Objective: The purpose of this study was to evaluate seizure outcome in children with intractable secondary generalized epilepsy without a resectable focus who underwent complete corpus callosotomy and compare these results to those of anterior two-third callosotomy. Method: Data were obtained for all patients who underwent a corpus callosotomy from 2000 to 2005. The study involved 37 patients. Eleven patients had anterior two-third corpus callosotomy compared with 28patients who underwent complete corpus callosotomy. Two of these patients had completion of their callosotomy following initial partial callosotomy. Seizure type, seizure frequency, and family satisfaction were evaluated for all patients pre- and postoperatively. Results: A reduction of ≧75% in seizures occurred in 75% of the total-callosotomy patients compared to 55% of the partial-callosotomy patients. Family satisfaction for complete and partial callosotomy was 89 and 73%, respectively. No prolonged neurologic deficits were observed in either group. Conclusion: Complete corpus callosotomy is the most effective treatment for secondary generalized intractable seizures not amenable to focal resection in children.
The use of scheduled atypical analgesics, such as COX-2 inhibitors, in addition to narcotics for the management of postoperative pain after craniotomy may provide better pain control, may decrease side effects associated with narcotic pain medications, may encourage earlier walking, and may reduce total hospitalization costs.
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