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Query: UMLS:C0014547 (focal epilepsy)
1,627 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Epilepsy is one of the most common neurologic diseases. Although in the vast majority of patients the epilepsy can be controlled by antiepileptic drugs, seizures remain medically refractory in about 30 to 40% of patients with focal epilepsy. In the latter patients, epilepsy surgery is an important therapeutic option. Epilepsy surgery in temporal lobe epilepsy has proven to achieve good seizure outcome. In extratemporal lobe epilepsy, however, both presurgical evaluation and surgical techniques are more challenging and, hereby, the results have been less favourable. In the last years, improved presurgical evaluations and sophisticated surgical techniques yielded to better seizure outcome. In this review, we discuss the diagnostic procedures and seizure outcome in extratemporal lobe surgery.
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PMID:[Epilepsy surgery of extra-temporal epilepsy]. 1181 63

Epilepsy surgery in childhood can now be more readily considered as a result of enhanced presurgical investigative techniques and safer neurosurgical practice. As in adults, surgery available may be resective (focal resection or hemispherectomy) or functional. The most common procedures are temporal lobectomy and hemispherectomy, with malformative lesions and developmental tumours the next common pathology. The timing of surgery requires careful consideration, and the definition of drug resistance given specific thought in the young child. Presurgical evaluation should be noninvasive where possible, and should include optimised MRI, including 3D data set and video EEG telemetry to document seizures. Detection of temporal lobe abnormalities in temporal lobe epilepsy with MR may be enhanced using quantitative and semiquantitative techniques. Ictal and interictal SPECT may be useful in providing information about the seizure onset zone, if reviewed in conjunction with MR data and video-EEG. Interictal PET is more likely to demonstrate abnormalities relating to structural defects, but may be particularly useful in infants where incomplete myelination may restrict structural information provided by MRI. Neuropsychology testing plays a major role by the determination of verbal and nonverbal function in older children, and in the determination of cerebral dominance. Functional MRI for determination of language or motor cortex may enhance such evaluation, although it is limited to older unsedated children at present. Although the aims of the presurgical evaluation remain similar to adult practice, the range of children presenting is wide, and the aims and likely outcome of surgery require careful evaluation with the family. This aside, the benefits of seizure elimination or reduction in drug-resistant focal epilepsy prior to adolescence, as well as in certain early catastrophic epilepsies of childhood, remain self apparent.
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PMID:Epilepsy surgery in childhood. 1206 8

Purpose. We sought to determine the prevalence of psychiatric conditions, particularly panic disorder, in epilepsy patients with ictal fear.Methods. A consecutive series of 12 patients with ictal fear underwent psychiatric evaluation, via either formal consultation with a psychiatrist or standardized interview using the Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview; the latter was addended to create an instrument specifically for use in epilepsy patients (MINI-Epi).Results. Four of the twelve patients (33%) with ictal fear had a comorbid diagnosis of panic disorder. One of these developed panic attacks only after epilepsy surgery, and another worsened after surgery, while in the other two panic attacks were not related to any surgical procedure. Two patients had other anxiety disorders. Eight patients (67%) had current or past depression; this did not appear to be related to the presence of panic disorder.Conclusion. A specific comorbidity exists between focal epilepsy with ictal fear and panic disorder. Involvement of the amygdala in both temporal lobe epilepsy and panic disorder may underlie this. The predisposition to panic disorder in these patients may be exacerbated by anterior temporal lobectomy.
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PMID:Comorbidity of ictal fear and panic disorder. 1260 30

The Wechsler Memory Scale-Third Edition (WMS-III) was developed to overcome the limitations of the Wechsler Memory Scale-Revised and is now routinely used for pre-surgical assessment of memory for patients considering elective surgery for the relief of temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE). We investigated the validity of this relatively new measure in a population of people with resistant TLE. The sample consisted of 99 patients with a diagnosis if TLE in which the epileptogenic focus was clearly identified and localised to either the right or left hemisphere. Patients underwent a full neuropsychological assessment as part of their pre-surgical investigation, including the WMS-III. Patients with right temporal focus had significantly lower scores on the visual immediate and delayed indices of the WMS-III than they did on the corresponding auditory indices. The left temporal focal epilepsy group, however, showed no significant disparity between auditory and visual scores. The overall scores of the WMS-III were significantly lower than the normative data from the WMS-III standardisation samples. Like its predecessor the Wechsler Memory Scale-Revised, the WMS-III has limited value in identifying particular memory deficits associated with either left and right temporal lobe focus. The results of the WMS-III show that it is capable of lateralising to right hemispheric impairment but is more problematic in the assessment of left hemispheric impairment. The visual verbal discrepancy has questionable validity. The search for reliable and valid measures to distinguish between left and right temporal epileptic focus continues.
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PMID:Validation of the Wechsler Memory Scale-III in a population of people with intractable temporal lobe epilepsy. 1269 28

Factors influencing atypical speech lateralization have theoretical importance in understanding the organization and reorganization of higher cognitive functions, as well as having practical implications, especially in brain surgery and neurorehabilitation. Atypical (right-sided or bilateral) language representation is more frequent in focal epilepsy than in healthy people. This difference is thought to be related to early childhood brain injuries localized in the neighbourhood of speech centres. The effect of epileptic activity on speech lateralization has not been investigated, although much data suggest that epileptic activity may interfere with higher brain functions. It can only be evaluated in a homogeneous human population with epilepsy having the same lesion type in the same localization. For these reasons, we investigated 184 patients with medial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE) due to unilateral hippocampal sclerosis (HS), but without other epileptogenic lesions. All patients underwent comprehensive presurgical evaluation. In MTLE, the influence of age at the time of brain damage, i.e. the initial precipitating injury (IPI), could be evaluated separately from the other timing factors. Of 100 patients in whom a Wada test was performed, left-sided speech occurred in 76% of the left-sided and in 100% of the right-sided MTLE patients (P < 0.05). For further evaluation, we included only the 83 left-sided MTLE patients. The mean age at seizure onset was 10.1 +/- 7.8 years (range 1-37 years); the mean age at evaluation was 35.7 +/- 9.8 years. Based on the Wada test, left-sided speech was present in 63 patients, while in 20 (24%) patients the Wada test revealed atypical speech dominance. We found that atypical speech representation in left MTLE was associated with higher spiking frequency (P < 0.05) and with sensory auras representing an ictal involvement of the lateral temporal structures (P < 0.01). Psychic auras suggesting limbic seizure spread showed a significant association with left-sided speech dominance in left MTLE (P < 0.05). Neither age at epilepsy onset, nor age at IPI was associated with atypical speech in left MTLE. Conclusively, we found that in patients with focal epilepsy, not only the known factors, i.e. the age at which the brain injury occurred and its localization, but also the epileptic activity itself, i.e. interictal discharges and seizure spread, may influence speech reorganization. Our findings also suggest that not only structural elements but also functional factors have an effect on the language organization of the brain.
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PMID:Epileptic activity influences the speech organization in medial temporal lobe epilepsy. 1282 21

Clinical features of 47 cases of temporal lobe epilepsy are analyzed and treatment of this disorder is outlined. Twenty-four per cent of all cases of epilepsy seen by one of the authors over a two-year period were of this type. Fifteen of these 47 patients had a history of birth injury. Care must be taken to distinguish the symptoms of temporal lobe epilepsy from those of acute anxiety or hysteria and to differentiate the short-lived temporal lobe attack from centrencephalic petit mal.Interictal personality disturbances were identified in 11 of 24 persons with temporal lobe epilepsy, four of 35 with focal epilepsy from all other areas, and one of 17 with centrencephalic epilepsy. Personality deviations most frequently encountered were irritability, aggressiveness, bouts of depression, paranoid tendencies and exhibitionism. Medical or surgical treatment often improves the personality abnormalities concomitantly with control of seizures.
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PMID:TEMPORAL LOBE EPILEPSY: A CLINICAL STUDY OF 47 CASES. 1422 3

Partial epilepsy with auditory features occasionally segregates in families as an autosomal dominant trait. In some families mutations in the leucine-rich glioma inactivated (LGI1) gene have been identified. Sporadic cases might harbour either denovo or low-penetrant LGI1 mutations, which will substantially alter the family risk for epilepsy. We selected sixteen sporadic patients with cryptogenic temporal lobe epilepsy and partial seizures with auditory features. We compared clinical features of these patients with those of published autosomal dominant family cases. We screened these patients for LGI1 mutations. Comparing the sporadic patients with the published familial cases no difference in either the primary auditory features or in the other associated epileptic manifestations was identified. Sequence analysis of the whole LGI1 gene coding regions in sporadic patients did not reveal changes in the LGI1 gene. The genetic analysis demonstrates that LGI1 is not a major gene for sporadic cases of partial epilepsy with auditory features at least in the Italian population. Screening of sporadic patients for LGI1 mutations appears not useful in genetic counselling of these patients.
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PMID:LGI1 gene mutation screening in sporadic partial epilepsy with auditory features. 1565 55

Via a detailed case study of mesial temporal lobe epilepsy, we show that a method of determining the direction of information flow among signals is able to provide focal localization via the simultaneous analysis of multiple EEG channels. This determination is accomplished by representing information flow direction via directed graphs, where focal electrodes are associated with high observed rates of pertinence to strongly connected subgraphs. Further clinical support to this finding is provided by results for an additional 9 cases of focal epilepsy cases. The graph theoretical approach is a tool for describing and analyzing the effective connectivity dynamics behind epileptic seizures and may provide a common language for studying other complex dynamic relationships between neural structures.
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PMID:Graph theoretical characterization and tracking of the effective neural connectivity during episodes of mesial temporal epileptic seizure. 1565 75

Epilepsy can affect perception. Ictal perceptual experiences are common, but interictal perceptual function may also be affected. This article reviews the English-language literature on interictal perceptual disturbances in epilepsy. Although most studies report impaired perceptual ability, heightened sensitivity has also been described. There is a compelling, though not absolute, correlation between affected sensory modality and underlying epilepsy syndrome. Olfaction is clearly affected in temporal lobe epilepsy, while visual information processing is disturbed in occipital lobe epilepsy. The cause of interictal perceptual dysfunction is unknown, but propagating epileptiform discharges may play a role. The presence of specific perceptual disturbances in focal epilepsy syndromes is consistent with the view that epilepsy is a network disease, with the potential to affect neural circuits distant from the seizure focus. The use of thoughtfully selected psychophysical perceptual tasks may provide additional insight into the cognitive impact of different epilepsy syndromes and of ablative epilepsy surgery.
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PMID:Interictal perceptual function in epilepsy. 1590 46

While voxel-based 3-D MRI analysis methods as well as assessment of subtracted ictal versus interictal perfusion studies (SISCOM) have proven their potential in the detection of lesions in focal epilepsy, a combined approach has not yet been reported. The present study investigates if individual automated voxel-based 3-D MRI analyses combined with SISCOM studies contribute to an enhanced detection of mesiotemporal epileptogenic foci. Seven consecutive patients with refractory complex partial epilepsy were prospectively evaluated by SISCOM and voxel-based 3-D MRI analysis. The functional perfusion maps and voxel-based statistical maps were coregistered in 3-D space. In five patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE), the area of ictal hyperperfusion and corresponding structural abnormalities detected by 3-D MRI analysis were identified within the same temporal lobe. In two patients, additional structural and functional abnormalities were detected beyond the mesial temporal lobe. Five patients with TLE underwent epileptic surgery with favourable postoperative outcome (Engel class Ia and Ib) after 3-5 years of follow-up, while two patients remained on conservative treatment. In summary, multimodal assessment of structural abnormalities by voxel-based analysis and SISCOM may contribute to advanced observer-independent preoperative assessment of seizure origin.
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PMID:Comparison of voxel-based 3-D MRI analysis and subtraction ictal SPECT coregistered to MRI in focal epilepsy. 1599 82


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