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Journal ArticleDOI

Cognitive and epilepsy outcomes after epilepsy surgery caused by focal cortical dysplasia in children: early intervention maybe better

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TLDR
The patients who had early seizure onset, no significant cognitive function deficit, and early surgical intervention with complete resection in less than 2 years of seizure duration showed best outcomes on seizure control, cognitive function, and quality of life.
Abstract
Focal cortical dysplasia (FCD) is a specific malformation of cortical development harboring intrinsic epileptogenicity, and most of the patients develop drug-resistant epilepsy in early childhood. The detrimental effects of early and frequent seizures on cognitive function in children are significant clinical issues. In this study, we evaluate the effects of early surgical intervention of FCD on epilepsy outcome and cognitive development. From 2006 to 2013, 30 children younger than 18 years old underwent resective surgery for FCDs at Taipei Veterans General Hospital. The mean age at surgery was 10.0 years (range 1.7 to 17.6 years). There were 21 boys and 9 girls. In this retrospective clinical study, seizure outcome, cognitive function, and quality of life were evaluated. To evaluate the effects to outcomes on early interventions, the patients were categorized into four groups according to age of seizure onset, duration of seizure before surgery, and severity of cognitive deficits. Eleven of 22 (50 %) patients demonstrated developmental delay preoperatively. The Engel seizure outcome achievements were class I in 21 (70 %), class II in 2 (7 %), class III in 6 (20 %), and class IV in 1 (3 %) patients. The locations of FCDs resected were in the frontal lobe in 18 cases, temporal lobe in 7, parietal lobe in 2, and in bilobes including frontoparietal lobe in 2 and parieto-occipital lobes in 1. Eight cases that had FCDs involved in the rolandic cortex presented hemiparesis before surgical resection. Motor function in four of them improved after operation. The histopathological types of FCDs were type Ia in 1, type Ib in 7, type IIa in 7, type IIb in 12, and type III in 3 patients. FCDs were completely resected in 20 patients. Eighteen (90 %) of them were seizure free (p < 0.001) with three patients that received more than one surgery to accomplish complete resection. The patients who had early seizure onset, no significant cognitive function deficit, and early surgical intervention with complete resection in less than 2 years of seizure duration showed best outcomes on seizure control, cognitive function, and quality of life. Delay in cognitive development and poor quality of life is common in children treated for FCDs. Early surgical intervention and complete resection of the lesion help for a better seizure control, cognitive function development, and quality of life. FCDs involved eloquent cortex may not prohibit complete resection for better outcomes.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Novel surface features for automated detection of focal cortical dysplasias in paediatric epilepsy

TL;DR: A classifier using surface-based features to identify focal abnormalities of cortical development in a paediatric cohort and was correctly identified with a higher sensitivity when novel features, based on the approach for detecting local cortical changes, were included, when compared to the sensitivity using only established features.
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Cognitive impairment in childhood onset epilepsy: up-to-date information about its causes

TL;DR: The overall impact of cognitive comorbidity in children with epilepsy and the independent contribution of each of these factors to cognitive impairment have not been clearly delineated are focused on.
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Quality of Life After Epilepsy Surgery in Children: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.

TL;DR: Epilepsy surgery can effectively improve QOL in children with medication-resistant seizures, through seizure freedom, which was associated with the greatest improvement in life quality.
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Expression of microRNA-129-2-3p and microRNA-935 in plasma and brain tissue of human refractory epilepsy

TL;DR: Plasma miRNA-129-2-3p has great potential as a non-invasive biomarker for early detection and clinical evaluation of refractory TLE and miR-935 in epilepsy patients was significantly upregulated in cortical brain tissues of TLE patients compared to controls.
Journal ArticleDOI

Value of ictal and interictal epileptiform discharges and high frequency oscillations for delineating the epileptogenic zone in patients with focal cortical dysplasia.

TL;DR: The typical interictal pattern has the highest sensitivity and the clinical use of FRs is limited by their low sensitivity, but there is a tendency that FRs had the lowest false positive rate.
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A longitudinal study

TL;DR: A longitudinal study of service delivery within MRI services at Auckland University for patients, researchers and referring practitioners has been carried out since 2006 as mentioned in this paper, with a focus on the effects of service provision on patient satisfaction.
Journal ArticleDOI

The clinicopathologic spectrum of focal cortical dysplasias: A consensus classification proposed by an ad hoc Task Force of the ILAE Diagnostic Methods Commission

TL;DR: Focal cortical dysplasias (FCD) are localized regions of malformed cerebral cortex and are very frequently associated with epilepsy in both children and adults.
Journal ArticleDOI

Focal dysplasia of the cerebral cortex in epilepsy

TL;DR: The cases of 10 epileptic patients are looked on provisionally as comprising a distinct form of cortical dysplasia in which localized, exotic populations of nerve cells underlie the electrical and clinical manifestations of certain focal forms of epilepsy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Is the underlying cause of epilepsy a major prognostic factor for recurrence

TL;DR: In adults, partial epilepsy is more difficult to treat than idiopathic generalized epilepsy, and in patients who have partial epilepsy, the location of the epileptogenic zone does not seem to be a determining factor.
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