Suppl. 1 -S68Insight in the role played by the mesio-temporal structures in human epilepsy is derived from various sources. Hughlings Jackson 1 was the first to describe the autopsy findings showing a mesio-temporal lesion as the cause of psychomotor seizures. Echoing the original observations of Jackson, the many experimental studies of the 1950s such as those of Kaada, 2 Vigouroux, 3 Gastaut, 4 Green, 5 and the observations in the human by Feindel,6,7 Penfield and Jasper, 8 and Morris 9 pointed to a very important role of the mesiobasal temporal structures in experimental and human epilepsies.There is a large collection of data describing striking neuropathological changes in the mesio-temporal area in patients with temporal epilepsy. The hippocampal sclerosis and mesiotemporal sclerosis, including changes in the amygdala, were reviewed in detail in a series of excellent studies. [10][11][12] More recent work has shed light on the basic physiopathological mechanisms responsible for mesio-temporal epilepsy. [13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20] Studies on mesio-temporal kindling have brought further ABSTRACT: Numerous studies of the electrophysiology and neuropathology of temporal lobe epilepsy have demonstrated the mesial temporal structures to be the site of seizure origin in the majority of cases. This is the rationale for a transcortical selective approach, first introduced by Niemeyer, for removal of the hippocampus and amygdala. Series from a number of centers have demonstrated the efficacy of selective amygdalohippocampectomy compared to a more traditional resection. The technique described here and used at the Montreal Neurological Institute (MNI) utilizes a strictly endopial resection of the hippocampal formation and amygdala in addition to computer image guidance to perform the procedure. Ninety-five percent of patients at the MNI who underwent selective amygdalohippocampectomy realized a cessation of seizures, or greater than 90% reduction, with minimal risk of complications.