Summary:Purpose: To determine if using more stringent criteria for cryptogenic Lennox-Gastaut syndrome (LGS) would result in an improved prognosis for that group. Cryptogenic, symptomatic, and non-cryptogenic LGS patients without etiology (indeterminate) were compared with respect to seizure and cognitive outcome.Methods: Retrospective chart review was performed on 245 patients seen at the Mayo Clinic Rochester from 1976 to 1997, with a diagnosis of either LGS or slow spike wave on EEG.LGS was confirmed in 107 (64 male, 43 female) patients. This group was divided into cryptogenic, symptomatic, and indeterminate groups containing 23,47, and 37 patients, respectively. In this study, cryptogenic patients all had normal development before onset of LGS, absence of dysmorphic features, normal neurologic examination, and normal magnetic resonance (MRI) brain imaging. Of the 107 patients, 74 had 2 3 years of follow-up.
Results:LGS onset in the 107 patients occurred at a median age of 4.0 years (range, 0.6-28.9 years). When last seen, 63% of those with symptomatic LGS had more than three seizures a day compared with 50% of cryptogenic and 34% of indeterminate patients. The most common seizure types were tonic (77%), atypical absence (61 %), and generalized tonic-clonic (56%). Only three patients, all part of the indeterminate group, were seizure free at last follow-up.Conclusions: Using stringent criteria in defining the cryptogenic subgroup resulted in no significant difference in seizure outcome. Individuals with a normal cognitive outcome did not segregate into one etiologic subgroup, but did have LGS onset at an older age.
Summary:Purpose: To assess the pre-and postsurgical frequency of memory, emotional, and vocational impairments in patients who underwent anterior temporal lobectomy (ATL), and to assess the relationship between emotional disturbance and memory abilities after ATL.Methods: Retrospective analysis of data was performed on 90 patients with medically intractable complex partial seizures who underwent ATL between 1981 and 2003. Patients were evaluated an average of 5 months before surgery and 11.3 months after surgery.Results: A moderate to high frequency of memory impairment (44.4%; verbal or nonverbal), emotional disturbance (38.9%) and unemployment (27.8%) existed in the same individuals both before and after surgery. There were small to moderate rates of new onset memory (18.9%), emotional (11.1%), and vocational (7.8%) difficulties after surgery often regardless of seizure control outcome. Patients who underwent left-ATL and had emotional disturbance after surgery had the lowest verbal memory test scores.Conclusions: Results highlight the importance of taking into account emotional status when assessing memory abilities after ATL. Results replicate the finding of moderate to high frequencies of memory impairment, emotional disturbance, and unemployment both before and after ATL. Results provide support for the rationale that cognitive, psychiatric and vocational interventions are indicated to mitigate the problems that exist before and persist after ATL.
The cases we describe demonstrate the role of focal resection in the treatment of EPC. Standard techniques of awake craniotomy have application in the treatment of this challenging problem.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.