1999
DOI: 10.1001/archneur.56.11.1338
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The Timing of Surgical Intervention for Mesial Temporal Lobe Epilepsy

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Cited by 79 publications
(56 citation statements)
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“…This practice parameter provides no evidence for guidelines on when to abandon pharmacotherapy and consider surgical intervention. 8,68,69 The literature suggests that the prognosis for complete freedom from disabling seizures following failure of two antiepileptic drugs diminishes rapidly as more antiepileptic drugs are found to be ineffective, that very few patients become free of disabling seizures when it is considered necessary to use two antiepileptic drugs, and that virtually none become free of disabling seizures when three drugs are necessary. 2 Contrasting these data with the consistently excellent prognosis for becoming free of disabling seizures with surgical intervention and the increasing evidence that continuation of disabling seizures over many years, particularly through adolescence and young adulthood, can result in irreversible psychosocial consequences raises consideration of surgical intervention for complex partial seizures after failure of two or three first-line antiepileptic drugs.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This practice parameter provides no evidence for guidelines on when to abandon pharmacotherapy and consider surgical intervention. 8,68,69 The literature suggests that the prognosis for complete freedom from disabling seizures following failure of two antiepileptic drugs diminishes rapidly as more antiepileptic drugs are found to be ineffective, that very few patients become free of disabling seizures when it is considered necessary to use two antiepileptic drugs, and that virtually none become free of disabling seizures when three drugs are necessary. 2 Contrasting these data with the consistently excellent prognosis for becoming free of disabling seizures with surgical intervention and the increasing evidence that continuation of disabling seizures over many years, particularly through adolescence and young adulthood, can result in irreversible psychosocial consequences raises consideration of surgical intervention for complex partial seizures after failure of two or three first-line antiepileptic drugs.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…MTLE commonly starts during the first decade of life, when it is often amenable to control with AEDs. However, by adolescence or early adulthood, it frequently becomes refractory (21,22). Most of the patients with MTLE have histopathologic and MRI evidence of neuropathologic damage (23,24).…”
Section: Is Refractory Epilepsy Progressive?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Advocates for very early surgery point out that there is relatively low surgical morbidity, that outcome is better when the surgery is done as early as possible, and that devastating consequences of some refractory epilepsy syndromes in children may be avoided with early surgery (21,22,73,(81)(82)(83). However, the inherent risks associated with surgery mandate that medical therapy be tried first for a period of time.…”
Section: Can "Progressive Epilepsy" Be Halted?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) is one of the most prevalent neurodegenerative diseases, and seizures in a significant fraction of people with TLE are resistant to antiepileptic drugs (Engel, 1999). Because of the involvement of the hippocampus in the generation and maintenance of seizures in TLE, the conventional treatment of patients with medically intractable TLE has been neurosurgical excision of the hippocampus or both hippocampus and amygdala.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%