Diagnosis and Surgical Treatment of Drug-Resistant Epilepsy.
Chinekwu AnyanwuGholam K MotamediPublished in: Brain sciences (2018)
Despite appropriate trials of at least two antiepileptic drugs, about a third of patients with epilepsy remain drug resistant (intractable; refractory). Epilepsy surgery offers a potential cure or significant improvement to those with focal onset drug-resistant seizures. Unfortunately, epilepsy surgery is still underutilized which might be in part because of the complexity of presurgical evaluation. This process includes classifying the seizure type, lateralizing and localizing the seizure onset focus (epileptogenic zone), confirming the safety of the prospective brain surgery in terms of potential neurocognitive deficits (language and memory functions), before devising a surgical plan. Each one of the above steps requires special tests. In this paper, we have reviewed the process of presurgical evaluation in patients with drug-resistant focal onset epilepsy.
Keyphrases
- drug resistant
- multidrug resistant
- temporal lobe epilepsy
- acinetobacter baumannii
- minimally invasive
- coronary artery bypass
- surgical site infection
- traumatic brain injury
- coronary artery disease
- human health
- risk assessment
- white matter
- multiple sclerosis
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- atrial fibrillation