Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0014547 (
focal epilepsy
)
1,627
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Spontaneous complaints of outpatients with
focal epilepsy
often stress the relationship between cognitive deficits and Quality of Life (QOL). Consequently, the aim of the present study was to find the best neuropsychological predictors of QOL in individuals with
focal epilepsy
, in order to guide their ambulatory health care. A sample of 71 Portuguese patients was studied: 40 female, 47 married, with a mean age of 37.48 years (S.D.=11.79, 16-62), mean education of 7.93 (S.D.=4.05, 3-17), and
focal epilepsy
of moderate severity. A Socio-demographic and Clinical Questionnaire, the SF-36 v1, the Cognitive Functioning Scale from the
ESI
-55, a Seizure Control scale (items from the Liverpool Seizure Severity Scale), and several neuropsychological tests were used. Semantic Fluency was the only predictor of Physical Functioning, Role Functioning - Physical, and Mental Health; I.A. Test predicted Bodily Pain; and Attentive Matrices predicted General Health, Vitality, and Role Functioning - Emotional. The Mental Component of the SF-36 v1 was predicted by Attentive Matrices, and the Physical Component was predicted by Semantic Fluency. Cognitive Functioning was predicted by the Token Test. Social Functioning and Seizure Control presented no statistically significant correlation with the neuropsychological indicators used. These results underscore the importance of cognitive performance to the QOL of individuals with
focal epilepsy
, supporting the systematic screening of cognitive performance in this population. Additionally, they suggest cognitive rehabilitation has the potential to improve these individuals' QOL.
...
PMID:Neuropsychological predictors of quality of life in focal epilepsy. 1918 81
Background:
Electric and magnetic source imaging methods (
ESI
, MSI) estimate the location in the brain of the sources generating the interictal epileptiform discharges (II-
ESI
, II-MSI) and the ictal activity (IC-
ESI
, IC-MSI). These methods provide potentially valuable clinical information in the presurgical evaluation of patients with drug-resistant
focal epilepsy
, evaluated for surgical therapy. In spite of the significant technical advances in this field, and the numerous papers published on clinical validation of these methods,
ESI
and MSI are still underutilized in most epilepsy centers performing a presurgical evaluation. Our goal was to review and summarize the published evidence on the diagnostic accuracy of interictal and ictal
ESI
and MSI in epilepsy surgery.
Methods:
We searched the literature for papers on
ESI
and MSI that specified the diagnostic reference standard as the site of resection and the postoperative outcome (seizure-freedom). We extracted data from the selected studies, to calculate the diagnostic accuracy measures.
Results:
Our search resulted in 797 studies; 48 studies fulfilled the selection criteria (25
ESI
and 23 MSI studies), providing data from 1,152 operated patients (515 for II-
ESI
, 440 for II-MSI, 159 for IC-
ESI
, and 38 for IC-MSI). The sensitivity of source imaging methods was between 74 and 90% (highest for IC-
ESI
). The specificity of the source imaging methods was between 20 and 54% (highest for II-MSI). The overall accuracy was between 50 and 75% (highest for IC-
ESI
). Diagnostic Odds Ratio was between 0.8 (IC-MSI) and 4.02-7.9 (II-
ESI
< II-MSI < IC-
ESI
).
Conclusions:
Our systematic review and meta-analysis provides evidence for the accuracy of source imaging in presurgical evaluation of patients with drug-resistant
focal epilepsy
. These methods have high sensitivity (up to 90%) and diagnostic odds ratio (up to 7.9), but the specificity is lower (up to 54%).
ESI
and MSI should be included in the multimodal presurgical evaluation.
...
PMID:Accuracy of Interictal and Ictal Electric and Magnetic Source Imaging: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. 3184 17
Epilepsy surgery is an important treatment modality for medically refractory
focal epilepsy
. The outcome of surgery usually depends on the localization accuracy of the epileptogenic zone (EZ) during pre-surgical evaluation. Good localization can be achieved with various electrophysiological and neuroimaging approaches. However, each approach has its own merits and limitations. Electroencephalography (EEG) Source Imaging (
ESI
) is an emerging model-based computational technique to localize cortical sources of electrical activity within the brain volume, three-dimensionally.
ESI
based pre-surgical evaluation gives an overall clinical yield of 73-91%, depending on choice of head model, inverse solution and EEG electrode density. It is a cost effective, non-invasive method which provides valuable additional information in presurgical evaluation due to its high localizing value specifically in MRI-negative cases, extra or basal temporal lobe epilepsy, multifocal lesions such as tuberous sclerosis or cases with multiple hypotheses. Unfortunately, less than 1% of surgical centers in developing countries use this method as a part of pre-surgical evaluation. This review promotes
ESI
as a useful clinical tool especially for patients with lesion-negative MRI to determine EZ cost-effectively with high accuracy under the optimized conditions.
...
PMID:EEG Source Imaging (ESI) utility in clinical practice. 3262 71