Khoury John S, Winokur Ronald S, Tracy Joseph I, Sperling Michael R
Jefferson Medical College, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA 19107, USA.
Epilepsy Res. 2005 Dec;67(3):89-99. doi: 10.1016/j.eplepsyres.2005.09.005. Epub 2005 Oct 26.
To identify clinical features related to seizure frequency after epilepsy surgery in patients with recurrent seizures.
No studies have examined the differences between patients who have rare seizures and patients who experience frequent seizures after epilepsy surgery. Since seizure frequency correlates with morbidity and quality of life, it is desirable to know which preoperative clinical features predict postoperative seizure frequency.
Patients with recurrent seizures were placed in two categories: rare postoperative seizures (< or =2 per year) and frequent postoperative seizures (> or =12 per year) using seizure frequency in the second postoperative year. Variables included preoperative seizure frequency, age of first risk, age at first seizure, epilepsy duration, age at surgery, history of febrile convulsions, tonic-clonic seizures, status epilepticus, or family history, IQ, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and positron emission tomography (PET). Variables were analyzed using non-parametric tests to assess relationship to postoperative seizure frequency.
Of 475 patients who had epilepsy surgery, 111 had rare or frequent seizures in the second postoperative year. After anterior temporal lobectomy (ATL), age of first risk< or =5 years and presence of mesial temporal sclerosis on MRI were associated with rare seizures (66% of patients), whereas lack of these risk factors was associated with frequent seizures (75% of patients) (p<0.03). For non-ATL operations, preoperative seizure frequency of > or =20 seizures per month was associated with frequent postoperative seizures (p=0.03). No other variables influenced outcome.
Some preoperative clinical features correlate with postoperative seizure frequency in patients with recurrent seizures after epilepsy surgery. This has implications for the surgical decision making process and early postoperative management.
确定复发性癫痫患者癫痫手术后与发作频率相关的临床特征。
尚无研究探讨癫痫手术后发作稀少的患者与发作频繁的患者之间的差异。由于发作频率与发病率及生活质量相关,因此了解哪些术前临床特征可预测术后发作频率很有必要。
根据术后第二年的发作频率,将复发性癫痫患者分为两类:术后发作稀少(每年≤2次)和术后发作频繁(每年≥12次)。变量包括术前发作频率、首次发作风险年龄、首次发作年龄、癫痫病程、手术年龄、热性惊厥病史、强直阵挛发作、癫痫持续状态或家族史、智商、磁共振成像(MRI)和正电子发射断层扫描(PET)。使用非参数检验分析变量,以评估其与术后发作频率的关系。
在475例行癫痫手术的患者中,111例在术后第二年发作稀少或频繁。在进行颞叶前切除术(ATL)后,首次发作风险年龄≤5岁以及MRI显示存在内侧颞叶硬化与发作稀少相关(66%的患者),而缺乏这些风险因素则与发作频繁相关(75%的患者)(p<0.03)。对于非ATL手术,术前每月发作频率≥20次与术后发作频繁相关(p=0.03)。没有其他变量影响结果。
癫痫手术后复发性癫痫患者的一些术前临床特征与术后发作频率相关。这对手术决策过程和术后早期管理具有重要意义。