A 24-year-old woman with intractable seizures: review of surgery for epilepsy
- PMID: 18984876
- DOI: 10.1001/jama.2008.709
A 24-year-old woman with intractable seizures: review of surgery for epilepsy
Abstract
Epilepsy, a recurrent seizure disorder affecting 1% of the population, can be genetic in origin and thereby affect multiple members in a family, or it can be sporadic. Many sporadic seizures come from a specific "focus" in the cortex. Focal-onset seizures account for 60% of all cases of epilepsy. Among patients with partial seizures, 35% respond poorly to available medication and may benefit from neurosurgical excisional surgery. In cases in which epilepsy is localized through different modes (electroencephalogram, magnetic resonance imaging, etc) to a specific area of the brain where there is an associated lesion, more than half of patients can expect a successful surgical outcome. In patients with consistent seizure-associated behavior but without a lesion, surgical treatment is less successful. Ms H, a young woman with a history of medically intractable partial epilepsy, does not have an anatomical lesion but wants to know if a surgical approach is a good option for her.
Comment in
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Surgical treatment for epilepsy: too little, too late?JAMA. 2008 Dec 3;300(21):2548-50. doi: 10.1001/jama.2008.756. JAMA. 2008. PMID: 19050199 No abstract available.
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Surgical treatment for epilepsy in developing countries.JAMA. 2009 May 6;301(17):1769; author reply 1769-70. doi: 10.1001/jama.2009.583. JAMA. 2009. PMID: 19417192 No abstract available.
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Update: A 24-year-old woman with intractable seizures: review of surgery for epilepsy.JAMA. 2011 Sep 14;306(10):1130. doi: 10.1001/jama.2011.1328. JAMA. 2011. PMID: 21917582 No abstract available.
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