Focal to bilateral motor seizures in temporal lobe epilepsy during video-EEG monitoring: effects on surgical outcome

The aim of this study was to determine whether the occurrence of focal to bilateral motor seizures in the course of partial drug withdrawal during video-EEG monitoring (FTBMS-M) had a predictive value for seizure recurrence in surgically treated patients with mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE). We...

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Veröffentlicht in:Acta neurologica Belgica 2021-12, Vol.121 (6), p.1677-1684
Hauptverfasser: Kovačević, Maša, Sokić, Dragoslav, Ristić, Aleksandar J., Baščarević, Vladimir, Đukić, Tijana, Pejović, Aleksa, Vojvodić, Nikola
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The aim of this study was to determine whether the occurrence of focal to bilateral motor seizures in the course of partial drug withdrawal during video-EEG monitoring (FTBMS-M) had a predictive value for seizure recurrence in surgically treated patients with mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE). We analyzed the outcomes of 59 patients who underwent temporal lobe resection at 12 month postoperative follow up. In total, 48 out of 59 patients were rendered seizure free (81.4%). We analyzed seizure recurrence after surgery with reference to: (i) occurrence of seizures after partial drug withdrawal during video-EEG monitoring (FTBMS-M); (ii) history of secondarily generalized seizures during antiepileptic drug treatment prior to presurgical evaluation (FTBMS-H) and (iii) other possible confounding factors (sex, age, epilepsy duration, side of surgery, presence of hippocampal sclerosis, and history of febrile seizures). We found no differences in the frequency of seizure recurrences between patients with FTBMS-M and patients without FTBMS-M (4/20 vs. 7/39; p  = 0.848). Conversely, the frequency of seizure recurrence was significantly higher among the patients with FTBMS-H than among the patients without FTBMS-H (7/20 vs. 4/39; p  = 0.021). The predictive value of FTBMS-H for postoperative seizure recurrence was confirmed in logistic regression analysis. We found a statistically significant influence of FTBMS-H on poor outcome after surgery, but not of FTBMS-M or other confounding variables, which suggests that withdrawal seizures do not affect postsurgical seizure control.
ISSN:0300-9009
2240-2993
DOI:10.1007/s13760-020-01471-7