» Articles » PMID: 19255406

A Lifetime Psychiatric History Predicts a Worse Seizure Outcome Following Temporal Lobectomy

Overview
Journal Neurology
Specialty Neurology
Date 2009 Mar 4
PMID 19255406
Citations 58
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Purpose: To identify the psychiatric and epilepsy variables predictive of postsurgical seizure outcome after anterotemporal lobectomy (ATL).

Methods: Retrospective study of 100 consecutive patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) who underwent ATL. The mean (+/- SD) follow-up period was 8.3 (+/- 3.1) years. Three types of surgical outcomes were examined at 2 years after surgery and at last contact: class IA (no disabling seizures no auras), class IA + IB (no disabling seizures), and class IA + IB + IC (no or rare disabling seizures in the first postsurgical year). Logistic regression analyses were performed separately for the three types of surgical outcomes. The epilepsy-related independent variables included age at onset, cause of TLE (mesial temporal sclerosis, lesional and cryptogenic TLE), extent of resection of mesial structures, neuropathologic abnormalities, having only complex partial seizures, and duration of the seizure disorder. The psychiatric independent variables included a postsurgical and presurgical lifetime history of mood, anxiety, attention deficit hyperactivity, and psychotic disorders.

Results: The absence of a psychiatric history was an independent predictor of all three types of surgical outcomes. In addition, a larger resection of mesial structures was a predictor for class IA outcome, and having only complex partial seizures (vs generalized tonic-clonic seizures) was a predictor for class IA + IB and IA + IB + IC. Having mesial temporal sclerosis (vs other causes of TLE) was a predictor for class IA + IB + IC as well.

Conclusions: These data indicate that a lifetime psychiatric history may be predictive of a worse postsurgical seizure outcome after an anterotemporal lobectomy.

Citing Articles

Do psychotropic drugs cause seizures?.

Gopaul M, Altalib H Epilepsy Behav Rep. 2024; 27:100679.

PMID: 38881884 PMC: 11179069. DOI: 10.1016/j.ebr.2024.100679.


Management of anhedonia after epilepsy surgery.

de Araujo Filho G, Teixeira A Epilepsy Behav Rep. 2024; 26:100658.

PMID: 38495401 PMC: 10940138. DOI: 10.1016/j.ebr.2024.100658.


It Is Time to Talk About Mortality in People With Functional Seizures.

Keezer M, Bermeo-Ovalle A Neurol Clin Pract. 2024; 14(2):e200267.

PMID: 38223346 PMC: 10783971. DOI: 10.1212/CPJ.0000000000200267.


Social Anxiety, Social Support, and Quality of Life in Patients With Epilepsy at a Tertiary Care Hospital in Saudi Arabia.

Alkoblan F, Alsoadan M, Alhajri A, Almousa M, Alsalamah F, Kazi A Cureus. 2023; 15(9):e45447.

PMID: 37859891 PMC: 10583124. DOI: 10.7759/cureus.45447.


Drug-resistant epilepsy and mortality-Why and when do neuromodulation and epilepsy surgery reduce overall mortality.

Rheims S, Sperling M, Ryvlin P Epilepsia. 2022; 63(12):3020-3036.

PMID: 36114753 PMC: 10092062. DOI: 10.1111/epi.17413.