[Clinical and morphological risk factors for epilepsy in patients with glial and metastatic brain tumors].
M Yu ProkudinM M OdinakI A LitvinenkoB V MartynovD V SvistovS E BushurovO A KlicenkoPublished in: Zhurnal nevrologii i psikhiatrii imeni S.S. Korsakova (2020)
Epilepsy and epileptic seizures was found to develop in 51.11% and 24.14% of cases in glial and metastatic brain tumors, respectively. Risk factors for developing epileptic seizures include younger age (up to 57 years), histological characteristics corresponding to diffuse astrocytomas, anaplastic astrocytomas, oligodendrogliomas, oligoastrocytomas, grade I-III malignancy, lesion of the temporal lobe, involvement of the cerebral cortex. Factors that reduce the risk for attacks include age over 57, histological characteristics corresponding to glioblastomas and metastatic tumors, grade IV malignancy, subcortical localization of the tumor, damage to the occipital lobe, involvement of the commissural pathways, subtentorial localization of the tumor, the absence of lesions of the temporal and frontal lobes of the brain, the involvement of both brain hemispheres, damage to two or more brain lobes, the presence of a midline shift.