reviewNeurologyFeb 25, 2003BRONZE OA

Practice parameter: Temporal lobe and localized neocortical resections for epilepsy

University of California, Los Angeles · Neurological Research Institute

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Results

One intention-to-treat Class I randomized, controlled trial of surgery for mesial temporal lobe epilepsy found that 58% of patients randomized to be evaluated for surgical therapy (64% of those who received surgery) were free of disabling seizures and 10 to 15% were unimproved at the end of 1 year, compared with 8% free of disabling seizures in the group randomized to continued medical therapy. There was a significant improvement in quantitative quality-of-life scores and a trend toward better social function at the end of 1 year for patients in the surgical group, no surgical mortality, and infrequent morbidity. Twenty-four Class IV series of temporal lobe resections yielded essentially identical results. There are similar Class IV results for localized neocortical resections; no Class I or II studies are available.

Conclusions

A single Class I study and 24 Class IV studies indicate that the benefits of anteromesial temporal lobe resection for disabling complex partial seizures is greater than continued treatment with antiepileptic drugs, and the risks are at least comparable. For patients who are compromised by such seizures, referral to an epilepsy surgery center should be strongly considered. Further studies are needed to determine if neocortical seizures benefit from surgery, and whether early surgical intervention should be the treatment of choice for certain surgically remediable epileptic syndromes.

Citation impact

903
total citations
FWCI
15.01
Percentile
100%
References
70
Citations per year

Authors

10

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Temporal lobe
  • Epilepsy
  • Medicine
  • Randomized controlled trial
  • Epilepsy surgery
  • Anterior temporal lobectomy
  • Surgery
  • Psychiatry
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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