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Medically refractory epilepsy associated with temporal lobe ganglioglioma: characteristics and postoperative outcome.
Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery 2006 October
OBJECTIVES: To define the postoperative seizure outcome and its predictors in patients with ganglioglioma-related temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE).
PATIENTS AND METHODS: We reviewed the pre- and post-surgical evaluation data of 23 patients with temporal lobe ganglioglioma, who had completed >or=1 year of postoperative follow-up. They comprised 4.9% of the patients with TLE and 67.6% of the tumoral TLE operated in a developing country epilepsy center during an 8-year period.
RESULTS: Median age at surgery was 20 years; median duration of epilepsy prior to surgery was 9 years. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed tumor in mesial temporal location in 18 patients (78.3%) and in the lateral location in 2; in the remaining 3, involved both mesial and lateral regions. EEG abnormalities were localized to the side of lesion in the majority. Mesial temporal lobe structures were included in the resection, if they were involved by the tumor; otherwise, lesionectomy alone was performed. During a median follow-up of 4 years, 19 (82.6%) patients were completely seizure-free. Epileptiform abnormalities persisting in the 1-year postoperative EEG predicted unfavorable seizure outcome.
CONCLUSION: We emphasize that, in patients with temporal lobe ganglioglioma, when the seizures are medically refractory, surgery offers potential for cure of epilepsy in the majority.
PATIENTS AND METHODS: We reviewed the pre- and post-surgical evaluation data of 23 patients with temporal lobe ganglioglioma, who had completed >or=1 year of postoperative follow-up. They comprised 4.9% of the patients with TLE and 67.6% of the tumoral TLE operated in a developing country epilepsy center during an 8-year period.
RESULTS: Median age at surgery was 20 years; median duration of epilepsy prior to surgery was 9 years. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed tumor in mesial temporal location in 18 patients (78.3%) and in the lateral location in 2; in the remaining 3, involved both mesial and lateral regions. EEG abnormalities were localized to the side of lesion in the majority. Mesial temporal lobe structures were included in the resection, if they were involved by the tumor; otherwise, lesionectomy alone was performed. During a median follow-up of 4 years, 19 (82.6%) patients were completely seizure-free. Epileptiform abnormalities persisting in the 1-year postoperative EEG predicted unfavorable seizure outcome.
CONCLUSION: We emphasize that, in patients with temporal lobe ganglioglioma, when the seizures are medically refractory, surgery offers potential for cure of epilepsy in the majority.
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