Epilepsy - Surgery

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In general, surgical effects on mental functioning and behavior depend on the extent and location of the surgical area.

Lesionectomy

Lesionectomy is a procedure that removes specifically abnormal tissues in certain conditions, such as:

  • Cavernous angiomas (abnormal clusters of blood vessels)
  • Low-grade brain tumors
  • Cortical dysplasias (these are abnormalities in fetal development in which the normal migration of nerve cells is altered for some reason)

This local surgery, which can cure the patient's epilepsy, has become possible with the advent of advanced imaging techniques such as MRI.

Other Surgeries



Other surgical procedures called hemispherectomy and corpus callosotomy offer hope for specific patients. They include infants and young children with catastrophic seizures that occur in one, or part of, a hemisphere and for patients whose seizures are due to specific structural brain abnormalities or tumors.

Hemispherectomy. Hemispherectomy is the removal of half the brain, leaving the deep structures intact. Surgery can take 12 hours and there is always some paralysis on one side of the body. There is also a small risk for hydrocephalus, coma, or even death. Quality of life is almost always improved, however, and the surgery does not reduce intelligence.

Corpus Callosotomy. Corpus callosotomy involves cutting the nerve fibers that connect one side of the brain to another. It does not remove brain tissue. It may be done in two stages. In the first, there is a partial separation. If seizures continue, the surgeon may perform a complete separation. This surgery can reduce (although not entirely stop) uncontrolled tonic clonic seizures. It has been used in patients with specific syndromes, such as Lennox-Gastaut syndrome. The procedure can have very severe complications, however.

Vagus Nerve Stimulation (VNS) and Other Neurostimulation Procedures

Electrical stimulation of areas in the brain that affect epilepsy is helping many patients with refractory epilepsy. Vagus nerve stimulation (VNS), an electrical stimulation of the vagus nerve, is now an accepted therapy for severe epilepsy that does not respond to AEDs. The two vagus nerves are the longest nerves in the body. They run along each side of the neck, then down the esophagus to the gastrointestinal tract. They affect swallowing, speech, and many other functions. They also appear to connect to parts of the brain that are involved with seizures. The procedure is as follows:

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