Wheelock I, Peterson C, Buchtel H A
Department of Psychiatry, University of Michigan Medical Center, Ann Arbor, USA.
Epilepsia. 1998 May;39(5):487-94. doi: 10.1111/j.1528-1157.1998.tb01410.x.
The medical benefits of epilepsy surgery are well documented, but the psychosocial consequences of surgery have received less attention. This is especially true of the roles of expectations and satisfaction in postsurgery functioning. The present study was designed to examine the relationships between expectation, satisfaction with surgery, and psychosocial functioning in patients and their significant others before and after epilepsy surgery.
The neuropsychology findings of 79 patients undergoing epilepsy surgery were examined from assessments made before, 2 months after, and 1 year after anterior temporal lobectomy (ATL) was performed. The Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) and the Washington Psychosocial Seizure Inventory (WPSI) were used to assess psychosocial functioning. A subset of 32 patients and their significant others were followed prospectively with an additional semistructured interview to assess expectations for and satisfaction with surgery outcome.
Before surgery, patients showed considerable problems with psychosocial adjustment. After surgery, patients in the seizure-free group showed improvements on the psychosocial measures at both follow-ups, whereas patients with continued seizures showed improvement at the 2-month follow-up and then a decline to baseline or worse at the time of the 1-year follow-up. Subjects who were studied prospectively had high presurgery expectations for seizure elimination. After surgery, subjects whose expectations were met reported high satisfaction whereas subjects whose expectations were not met reported low satisfaction. Satisfaction with surgery was associated with better psychosocial functioning.
Such data help elucidate the ways in which successful epilepsy surgery results in improved psychosocial functioning. The results identify ways to increase the likelihood that both patients who are seizure-free and those with reduced seizure frequency may benefit from surgery.
癫痫手术的医学益处已有充分记录,但手术的社会心理后果却较少受到关注。期望和满意度在术后功能中的作用尤其如此。本研究旨在探讨癫痫手术前后患者及其重要他人的期望、对手术的满意度与社会心理功能之间的关系。
对79例接受癫痫手术的患者在进行前颞叶切除术(ATL)之前、术后2个月和术后1年的评估中所获得的神经心理学结果进行了检查。使用明尼苏达多相人格调查表(MMPI)和华盛顿社会心理癫痫调查表(WPSI)来评估社会心理功能。对32例患者及其重要他人进行了前瞻性随访,并进行了一次额外的半结构化访谈,以评估对手术结果的期望和满意度。
手术前,患者在社会心理适应方面存在相当大的问题。手术后,无癫痫发作组的患者在两次随访中的社会心理指标均有所改善,而仍有癫痫发作的患者在2个月随访时有所改善,但在1年随访时又降至基线水平或更差。前瞻性研究的受试者术前对消除癫痫发作抱有很高的期望。手术后,期望得到满足的受试者报告了较高的满意度,而期望未得到满足的受试者报告了较低的满意度。对手术的满意度与更好的社会心理功能相关。
这些数据有助于阐明成功的癫痫手术改善社会心理功能的方式。研究结果确定了一些方法,可增加无癫痫发作的患者和癫痫发作频率降低的患者都能从手术中获益的可能性。