Scientific literature regarding the perioperative risk and best management techniques for OSAHS patients is scanty and of limited quality. There is insufficient information to develop an AASM standards of practice recommendation. Therefore, the Clinical Practice Review Committee (CPRC) used the available data to make this statement based upon a consensus of clinical experience and published peer-reviewed medical evidence. Important components of the perioperative management of OSAHS patients include a high degree of clinical suspicion, control of the airway throughout the perioperative period, judicious use of medications, and appropriate monitoring. Further research is needed to define the magnitude of risk and optimal perioperative care.
The clinical and EEG features of 11 patients with seizures arising in the supplementary motor area (SMA) were reviewed. All patients underwent prolonged EEG with simultaneous video recording. Three patients had recordings and electrical stimulation of the SMA using subdural electrode arrays. All patients had preservation of consciousness during the seizure unless it became secondarily generalized. Tonic posturing of the extremities was present in all patients, and in seven it was present bilaterally. Adversive movements were not seen unless the seizure became secondarily generalized. Interictal and/or ictal abnormalities were present at or adjacent to the midline in ten patients. Seizures arising from the supplementary motor region are clinically distinct, and the diagnosis can almost always be verified with prolonged EEG/video recording.
We report 31 episodes of ictal vomiting in nine patients, documented by simultaneous video and EEG recordings. In four patients, chronically implanted subdural electrode arrays recorded the event. Only one patient showed "projectile" vomiting. Amnesia for the episode occurred in eight of the nine patients. Interictal epileptiform abnormalities were maximal in the right temporal region in seven patients and bitemporal in two. Ictal epileptiform abnormalities were lateralized to the right hemisphere and involved temporal lobe structures in all patients. Three of four patients recorded with subdural electrode arrays were seizure-free following right temporal lobectomy, and the fourth continues to have ictus emeticus at a reduced rate. The consistent right hemisphere lateralization of seizures in this series corroborates with earlier reports documenting right-sided lateralization in four of five previous cases. Two features that help delineate paroxysmal vomiting as an ictal event are (1) patient unawareness of vomiting and (2) its association with other ictal phenomena.
We report transient changes in computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans in a patient with focal status epilepticus, referred to us with a tentative diagnosis of neoplasm based on CT and angiographic findings. EEG seizures originated independently from each temporal-occipital area, predominantly from the right. Previous EEGs had shown almost exclusively right temporo-occipital epileptogenic activity. MRI showed increased signal intensity, and CT showed decreased right hemisphere attenuation without enhancement. One month later, there was resolution of the radiological and clinical abnormalities. The transient CT and MRI changes probably represented focal cerebral edema, developing during focal status epilepticus. Lack of change in the left hemisphere probably reflected the quantitative difference in epileptic activity. Clues to the diagnosis of focal edema due to status include: (1) changes on electrical and imaging studies that correlate anatomically with the clinical status, and (2) resolution of abnormalities with appropriate seizure control. In patients with suspected seizure disorders, electrical and clinical data should be correlated before interpretation is made of focal lesions seen by neuroimaging techniques.
Posthypoxic and postencephalitic myoclonus is often poorly controlled with current treatments. The authors successfully treated three patients with posthypoxic and postencephalitic myoclonus by using levetiracetam, a new antiepileptic drug. Levetiracetam appears to be a promising agent for treating action myoclonus caused by hypoxic and encephalitic brain injury-the degree of functional improvement may depend on the severity of associated motor dysfunction.
Summary:Purpose: Anterior temporal lobectomy (ATL) is an important option for treatment of medically refractory seizures. Patient selection is not always clear-cut, and there is inherent morbidity and mortality associated with the invasive and expensive surgical protocols. To determine whether patient selection might be facilitated by application of artifical intelligence, we developed a model that predicted seizure outcome after ATL, using a simulated neural network (SNN).Methods: Predictions of the model were compared with predictions derived from conventional discriminant function analysis. Neural networks and discriminant functions were devised that would predict the occurrence of both Class 1 outcomes (totally seizure-free), and Class 1 or Class 2 outcomes (nearly or totally seizure-free), using data from 87 patients from three surgical centers. The SNNs and discriminant functions were developed using data from a randomly selected subsample of 65 patients, and both models were cross-validated, using the remaining 22 patients.Results: The discriminant functions showed overall predictive accuracy of 78.5% and 72.7%, while the neural networks demonstrated overall accuracy of 81 3% and 95.4%.Conclusions: Simulated neural networks show promise as adjuncts to decision-making in the selection of epilepsy surgery patients.
Transient elevation of serum levels of prolactin has been observed following several types of epileptic seizures and after electrical stimulation of limbic temporal lobe structures via implanted electrodes. Transcranial magnetic stimulation has been found to selectively induce epileptiform afterdischarges in the epileptic focus of candidates for epilepsy surgery who suffered from temporal lobe epilepsy. Lateralized serial transcranial magnetic stimulation was therefore used and serum levels of prolactin or luteinizing hormone were measured to find if it could be used as a non-invasive diagnostic tool. The investigation was performed on six patients and five healthy volunteers. In the patients the induction of epileptiform potentials was continuously monitored via subdural electrodes. A transient surge of prolactin and luteinizing hormone was found in only one patient, in whom a complex partial seizure was induced. Thus, transcranial magnetic stimulation appeared not to be helpful for the lateralization of the (primary) epileptic focus during presurgical evaluation.
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