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Anterior temporal lobectomy for epilepsy: success and shortcomings Dario J. Englot, visiting student Yale MD/PhD Program September 24, 2009 Department of Neurosurgery
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61-year-old right-handed male with seizures for past 20 years per pt: daily “day dreaming” spells, losing touch with reality per wife: during seizures, face droops, clears throat, says “okay” repeatedly, non responsive for ~30s no aura; somewhat confused for several minutes afterwards has failed management with multiple anti-epileptics: depakote, carbamazepine, lamotrigine, levetiracetam PMH/PSH: retinal and shoulder surgeries Meds: levetiracetam, ASA, MVI NKDA SH: married engineer, no substance abuse FH : no epilepsy Patient history
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All vital signs in normal limits, and normal cardiopulmonary exam Neurological exam: no deficits detected in mental status, cranial nerves, strength, sensation, reflexes, cerebellar function, or gait Scalp EEG monitoring shows clinical episodes are associated with left temporal seizure activity MRI, PET (outside hospital) Physical exam and tests
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MRI
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PET
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Left anterior temporal lobectomy Dr. Emad Eskandar Assist: Dr. Jason Gerrard Post-operatively expressive aphasia for a few hours urinary retention: treated full, uneventful recovery afterwards Operative course
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Post-Op MRI
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Blumenfeld (2002) Neuroanatomy Hippocampal sclerosis: in 50-70% of resected hippocampi DeLanerolle (2003) Epilepsia Eid et al (2007) Acta Neuropathol Hippocampus in mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE)
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Medically refractory seizures with diminished QOL? History, neurology consultations, and neuropsychology reports Localizable lesion or seizure focus? Scalp or intracranial electrode EEG (ictal, interictal) MRI (interictal) PET (interictal) SPECT (ictal, interictal) Localized seizure focus in a resectable region? fMRI Wada Language mapping Neuropsychological evaluation MTLE: Who should have surgery? Spencer (2002) The Lancet Berg et al (2003) Epilepsia
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Spencer and Huh (2008) The Lancet Temporal Lobectomy Outcomes
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Identifiable lesions and consistent imaging and electrophysiological findings improve outcomes Some “good” surgical candidates, including those with unilateral temporal lobe sclerosis, nevertheless have recurrence post-operatively Pathogenesis: Incomplete resection of epileptogenic lesions vs. new epileptogenicity Why does surgery sometimes fail?
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Extent of resection: anterior lobectomy vs. selective amygdalohippocampectomy Cohort study,100 patients (50 each surgery), followed 5 yr: no statistical difference in recurrence rates 1 Demographics: age, sex, or duration of epilepsy Retrospective chart review, 105 patients, followed up to 3 yr: no relationship between factors & recurrence 2 1) Tanriverdi et al (2008) J Neurosurg 2) Ramos et al (2009) J Neurosurg Why does surgery sometimes fail?
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Pre-op electrophysiology and imaging results Retrospective review, 118 pts, followed 1 yr: similar data with/without recurrence 1 (also found in previously mentioned study 2 ) Historical risk factors: head trauma, tuberous sclerosis, VP shunts, AVMs, CNS infection, global hypoxia, febrile seizures, status epilepticus 118 patients followed 1 yr: only status epilepticus showed prediction (p = 0.0276) of a higher recurrence rate 1 Why does surgery sometimes fail? 1) Hardey et al (2003) Epilepsia 2) Ramos et al (2009) J Neurosurg
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Discontinuation of antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) 6 retrospective clinical studies each with > 5 patients taken off meds (total N = 54-210 per study) Sironi et al (1983) Riv Neurol; Murro et al (1991) J Epilepsy; Schiller et al (2000) Neurology; Van Veelan (2001) Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd; Al-Kaylani (2002) Epilepsia; Lachhwani (2003) Neurology Relapse rate after AEDs D/Ced: 32-36% (f/u 1-6 yr) Relapse rate with AEDs onboard: 7-17% (f/u 1-5 yr) No benefit of waiting to attempt AED D/C after 2 yr in adults and 1 yr children Reviewed in: Hardey et al (2003) Epilepsia Why does surgery sometimes fail?
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Schmidt (2004) Epilepsia Seizure-free (%)
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Limitation: possible selection bias with retrospective observations Further study: need randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of AED continuation vs. discontinuation 2 yr post-op AED discontinuation after temporal lobectomy Hardey et al (2003) Epilepsia (review); Sironi et al (1983) Riv Neurol; Murro et al (1991) J Epilepsy; Schiller et al (2000) Neurology; Van Veelan (2001) Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd; Al-Kaylani (2002) Epilepsia; Lachhwani (2003) Neurology
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Medically-refractory mesial TLE can often be treated successfully with temporal lobe resection Seizure recurrence post-operatively can be difficult to predict, but may be reduced with sustained (> 2 yr) anti-epileptic therapy To the faculty, residents, and staff of MGH neurosurgery Conclusions Thank you
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