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Review
. 2017 Jul;17(7):661-666.
doi: 10.1080/14737175.2017.1331129. Epub 2017 May 25.

Chronic subthreshold cortical stimulation: a therapeutic and potentially restorative therapy for focal epilepsy

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Review

Chronic subthreshold cortical stimulation: a therapeutic and potentially restorative therapy for focal epilepsy

Brian Nils Lundstrom et al. Expert Rev Neurother. 2017 Jul.

Abstract

Approximately one third of patients with focal epilepsy continue to have ongoing seizures despite adequate trials of anti-seizure medications. Surgery to remove the epileptogenic zone remains the most efficacious treatment option for focal drug-resistant epilepsy. However, when cortical areas are eloquent or there are multiple epileptogenic zones, surgical resection is not an ideal approach. Cortical stimulation provides an attractive alternative. Area covered: Here, the authors describe Chronic Subthreshold Cortical Stimulation (CSCS), which uses continuous intracranial electrical stimulation applied near the epileptogenic zone to lower seizure probability. The authors review literature related to CSCS. One challenge is finding the most efficacious set of stimulation parameters for each patient. Expert commentary: Data supporting CSCS are limited but promising for the treatment of patients with focal drug resistant epilepsy who are not surgical candidates. Additional electrophysiological biomarkers to estimate cortical excitability are needed.

Keywords: Cortical stimulation; chronic electrical stimulation; drug-resistant epilepsy; focal seizures.

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