-
-
Comparison of corpus callosotomy and vagus nerve
stimulation in children with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome.
Department of Pediatrics,
Epilepsy Center, Sanggye Paik Hospital, Inje University College of
Medicine, Seoul, Republic of Korea.
Purpose:
To compare the efficacy of corpus callosotomy and vagus nerve
stimulation (VNS) for long-term adjunctive therapy in children with
Lennox-Gastaut syndrome (LGS). Method: Fourteen patients underwent a
total corpus callosotomy and 10 patients received VNS implantation. The
patients were monitored for more than 12 months after treatment, and
seizure rates and complications were retrospectively evaluated.
Results: Seizure types among the 24 patients included atonic or tonic
seizures with head-drops in 17 patients, generalized tonic seizures in
two patients, atypical absence seizures in one patient, generalized
tonic-clonic seizures in one patient, and myoclonic seizures in three
patients. Of the 14 patients who underwent a corpus callosotomy, nine
(64.3%) had a greater than 50% reduction in seizure frequency and five
(35.7%) had a greater than 75% reduction. Of the 10 patients who
underwent VNS implantation, seven (70.0%) had a greater than 50%
reduction in seizure frequency and two (20.0%) had a greater than 75%
reduction. There was no significant difference between the two
procedures in terms of final efficacy. Complications of corpus
callosotomy included aphasia in one patient, ataxia in another, and
paresis in a third. Among patients receiving VNS, one patient
experienced dyspnea while sleeping and one patient suffered from
drooling. These complications were transient and tolerable, and were
controlled by simple adjustments of VNS treatment parameters.
Conclusion: The efficacy and safety of corpus callosotomy and VNS were
comparable in children with LGS.
PMID: 17825516 [PubMed - as supplied
by publisher]
-
Related Links
See
all Related Articles...