Browsing by Author "Abraham, Mathew"
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Item An audit of the presurgical evaluation and patient selection for extratemporal resective epilepsy surgery in a resource-poor country(SEIZURE-EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF EPILEPSY, 2012)Purpose: The selection of ideal candidates for extratemporal resective epilepsy surgery is a challenge in resource-poor countries because of the limited presurgical diagnostic facilities and their affordability. To audit the presurgical evaluation strategy and selection for extratemporal resective epilepsy surgery in a resource-poor region.Methods: From the prospective database maintained at an epilepsy surgery center in southern India, we reviewed the data of consecutive patients who underwent presurgical evaluation from January 2005 through December 2008 for antiepileptic drug-resistant focal epilepsies emanating from the frontal, parietal and occipital lobes. Out of 285 patients, only 71 (24.9%) underwent resective surgery; the remaining 214 (75.1%) patients could not be selected for surgery. We inquired the reasons for their exclusion from surgery.Results: The difference in the rates of seizure-free outcome between surgical and non-surgical groups was highly significant (73.2% vs. 7.7%, P < 0.0005). The major reasons for exclusion from surgery were normal MRI in 107 (50%), inability to afford invasive EEG monitoring in 40 (18.7%) and lesion location adjacent to eloquent cortical areas in 27 (12.6%) patients. While clustering of seizures and presence of preoperative neurological deficits favored surgical selection, the presence of secondary generalized seizures and discordant interictal epileptiform abnormalities were associated with exclusion from surgery.Conclusions: We conclude that, in a resource-poor country, ideal candidates for extratemporal resective epilepsy surgery are those with well-circumscribed lesions not adjoining eloquent cortical areas. In such patients, concordant EEG findings and absence of preoperative secondary generalized seizures reinforce selection for surgery. (C) 2012 British Epilepsy Association. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.Item Anesthesia for awake craniotomy: A retrospective study(NEUROLOGY INDIA, 2007)Context: Awake craniotomy is increasingly performed the world over. We share our experience of performing craniotomy awake with our anesthetic protocol. Aims: To evaluate and analyze the anesthesia records of the patients who underwent awake craniotomy at our institution. Settings and Design: University teaching hospital, Retrospective study. Materials and Methods: We reviewed records of the 42 consecutive patients who underwent awake craniotomy under conscious sedation using Fentanyl and Propofol infusion until December 2005. The drugs were titrated (Bispectral monitoring was used in 16 patients) to facilitate intermittent intraoperative neurological testing. All patients received scalp blocks with a mixture of bupivacaine and lignocaine with adrenaline. Haloperidol and ondansetron were administered in all patients at induction of anesthesia. Results: All patients completed the procedure. One patient each needed endotracheal intubation and LMA for airway control during closure, while another required CPAP perioperatively because of desaturation to <80%. There was significantly decreased use of anesthetics (P<0.001) and a trend towards reduction in complications (e.g. respiratory depression and deep sedation) (P>0.05) with the use of BIS as compared to without BIS. Intraoperative complications were hypertension (19%), tight brain (14.2%), focal seizure (9.5%) respiratory depression (7.1%), deep sedation (7.1%), tachycardia (7.1%) and bradycardia. Two patients desaturated to <95%. 23.8% patients developed transient neurological deficits. The most frequent postoperative complications were PONV (19%) and seizures (16.6%). Conclusions: With the use of advanced monitoring and newer anesthetics, awake craniotomy is a relatively safe procedure with an accepted rate of complications.Item Anesthesia management of awake craniotomy performed under asleep-awake-asleep technique using laryngeal mask airway: report of two cases.(Neurology India, 2008)Asleep-awake-asleep technique of anesthesia is used during awake craniotomy with or without securing airway. We assessed this technique using laryngeal mask airway (LMA) in two patients. Patients underwent awake craniotomy for epilepsy surgery and the removal of a frontotemporal glioma. After anesthesia induction, airway was secured using LMA. Anesthesia was maintained using oxygen, nitrous oxide and sevoflurane, supplemented with an infusion of propofol and remifentanil. Twenty minutes before corticography, anesthesia was discontinued and LMA removed. Both patients were awake and cooperative during the neurological assessment and surgery on eloquent areas. The LMA was reinserted before the closure of the dura and remained in place until the end of surgery. Both patients had no recall of events under anesthesia, although experienced mild pain and discomfort during awake phase of surgery. Both expressed complete satisfaction over the anesthetic management. Asleep-awake-asleep technique using LMA offers airway protection. The painful aspect of surgery can be performed under anesthesia, hence minimizing the duration of stress and pain. Patients remained awake and cooperative throughout the time of neurological testing.Item Lingual epilepsia partialis continua in Rasmussen's encephalitis(EPILEPTIC DISORDERS, 2006)We report an adult male who presented with disabling dysarthria due to epilepsia partialis continua (EPC) of the left half of the tongue. The clinical, brain magnetic resonance imaging and electroencephalographic features were consistent with Rasmussen's encephalitis, although, despite having had the disease for over 15 years, he did not exhibit any hemiparesis. The accompanying video illustrates the lingual EPC and its total resolution following a right frontal opercular focal cortical resection.Item Medically refractory epilepsy associated with temporal lobe ganglioglioma: Characteristics and postoperative outcome(CLINICAL NEUROLOGY AND NEUROSURGERY, 2006)Objectives: To define the postoperative seizure outcome and its predictors in patients with ganglioglioma-related temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE).Patients and methods: We reviewed the pre- and post-surgical evaluation data of 23 patients with temporal lobe ganglioglioma, who had completed >= 1 year of postoperative follow-up. They comprised 4.9% of the patients with TLE and 67.6% of the tumoral TLE operated in a developing country epilepsy center during an 8-year period.Results: Median age at surgery was 20 years; median duration of epilepsy prior to surgery was 9 years. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed tumor in mesial temporal location in 18 patients (78.3%) and in the lateral localtion in 2; in the remaining 3, involved both mesial and lateral regions. EEG abnormalities were localized to the side of lesion in the majority. Mesial temporal lobe structures were included in the resection, if they were involved by the tumor; otherwise, lesionectomy alone was performed. During a median follow-up of 4 years, 19 (82.6%) patients were completely seizure-free. Epileptiform abnormalities persisting in the 1-year postoperative EEG predicted unfavorable seizure outcome.Conclusion: We emphasize that, in patients with temporal lobe ganglioglioma, when the seizures are medically refractory, surgery offers potential for cure of epilepsy in the majority. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.Item Outcome after corpus callosotomy in children with injurious drop attacks and severe mental retardation(BRAIN & DEVELOPMENT, 2007)Wide variability in patient selection, extent of callosal section and definition of successful outcome between studies make impact of corpus callosotomy on patients with medically refractory epilepsies difficult to interpret. Severe mental retardation is considered to be predictive of unfavorable seizure outcome after callosotomy. Very little attention has been paid on the influence of callosotomy on the psychosocial burden on the patients' families. We evaluated the seizure outcome, and parental perception about change in cognition and behavior of 17 children (median age 9.5 years, range 3.5-18 years) with severe mental retardation (IQ < 30 in all, except one) and injurious drop attacks, who have completed >= 1-year postoperative follow-up after callosotomy. Nearly two-thirds of our patients had >= 90% reduction in drop attacks and generalized tonic-clonic seizures. In the one-stage total callosotomy group, 9 of 11 (82%) patients had favorable outcome, compared to 2 of the 6 (33%) in the partial callosotomy group. Absence of generalized epileptiform discharges on the 1-year postoperative EEG was significantly associated with a favorable seizure outcome. The mean duration of epilepsy prior to callosotomy tended to be shorter among patients with favorable seizure outcome. Postoperative complications were trivial and transient. Nearly three-fourths of the parents appreciated improvements in behavior and attentiveness of their children and were satisfied with the outcome. We conclude that, in children with severe mental retardation and injurious drop attacks, total callosotomy can be undertaken as a one-stage procedure with insignificant morbidity and results in highly favorable seizure outcome. (c) 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.Item Real-time functional MR imaging (fMRI) for presurgical evaluation of paediatric epilepsy(PEDIATRIC RADIOLOGY, 2007)Background The role of fMRI in the presurgical evaluation of children with intractable epilepsy is being increasingly recognized. Real-time fMRI allows the clinician to visualize functional brain activation in real time. Since there is no off-line data analysis as in conventional fMRI, the overall time for the procedure is reduced, making it clinically feasible in a busy clinical sitting.Objective (1) To study the accuracy of real-time fMRI in comparison to conventional fMRI with off-line processing; (2) to determine its effectiveness in mapping the eloquent cortex and language lateralization in comparison to invasive procedures such as intraoperative cortical stimulation and Wada testing; and (3) to evaluate the role of fMRI in presurgical decision making in children with epilepsy.Materials and methods A total of 23 patients (age range 6-18 years) underwent fMRI with sensorimotor, visual and language paradigms. Data processing was done in real time using in-line BOLD.Results The results of real-time fMRI matched those of off-line processing done using the well-accepted standard technique of statistical parametric mapping (SPM) in all the initial ten patients in whom the two techniques were compared. Coregistration of the fMRI data on a 3-D FLAIR sequence rather than a T1-weighted image gave better information regarding the relationship of the lesion to the area of activation. The results of intraoperative cortical stimulation and fMRI matched in six out of six patients, while the Wada test and fMRI had similar results in four out of five patients in whom these techniques were performed. In the majority of patients in this series the technique influenced patient management.Conclusion Real-time fMRI is an easily performed and reliable technique in the presurgical workup of children with epilepsy.Item Selection of ideal candidates for extratemporal resective epilepsy surgery in a country with limited resources(EPILEPTIC DISORDERS, 2010)Aim. To investigate how to select ideal candidates for extratemporal resective epilepsy surgery, without compromising efficacy and safety, in countries with limited pre-surgical diagnostic facilities. Method. From the prospective database maintained at an epilepsy surgery centre in southern India, we reviewed the attributes of consecutive patients who had completed at least two years of follow-up after resections involving frontal, parietal and occipital lobes for medically refractory focal seizures. Results. Of 386 patients diagnosed with extratemporal refractory epilepsies during the study period, 61 (15.8%) were selected based on the presence of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-identified lesions (in all) and concordant scalp recorded electroencephalographic (EEG) data (in nearly two thirds). Seventeen (27.8%) required invasive investigations either to define the ictal onset zone, eloquent area, or both. During a median follow-up period of five years, 63% of our patients were seizure-free, excluding the presence of auras. Permanent disabling neurological sequelae occurred in three (4.9%) patients. According to univariate analysis, pre-operative secondary generalised seizures and interictal epileptiform discharges (IEDs), during a one-year post-operative EEG monitoring period, portended unfavourable seizure outcome. In multivariate analysis, frontal lobe resections and IEDs in post-operative EEGs were independent predictors of unfavourable outcome. Conclusions. Extratemporal resective epilepsy surgery can be undertaken in countries with limited resources with efficacy and safety, comparable to that in developed countries, when patients are selected based on the presence of MRI-identified lesions and scalp EEG concordance. In such patients, invasive EEG examinations, when necessary, can be undertaken by limited coverage of cortical areas at an affordable cost.