Approach to pediatric epilepsy surgery: State of the art,
Part II: Approach to specific epilepsy syndromes and etiologies.
Adult
and Pediatric Epilepsy Program, Department of Pediatrics and Adolescent
Medicine, American University of Beirut Medical Center, Lebanon;
Department of Biochemistry, American University of Beirut, Lebanon;
Department of Pediatrics, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center,
TX, USA.
The second of this 2-part review
depicts the specific approach to the common causes of pediatric
refractory epilepsy amenable to surgery. These include tumors,
malformations due to abnormal cortical development, vascular
abnormalities and certain epileptic syndromes. Seizure freedom rates
are high (usually 60-80%) following tailored focal resection,
lesionectomy, and hemispherectomy. However, in patients in whom the
epileptogenic zone overlaps with unresectable eloquent cortex, and in
certain epileptic syndromes, seizure freedom may not be achievable. In
such cases, palliative procedures such as callosotomy, multiple subpial
transections and vagus nerve stimulation can achieve reduction in
seizure severity but rarely seizure freedom. Integration of the new
imaging techniques and the concepts of neuronal plasticity, the
epileptogenic lesion, the ictal onset, symptomatogenic, irritative, and
epileptogenic zones is an expanding and dynamic process that will allow
us, in the future, to better decide on the surgical approach of choice
and its timing.
PMID: 18590975 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]