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  • 作者或编辑器:Ahsan牛叫声ax
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Robert A. McGovern, Elia Pestana Knight, Ajay Gupta, Ahsan N. V. Moosa, Elaine Wyllie, William E. Bingaman, and Jorge Gonzalez-Martinez

OBJECTIVE

The goal in the study was to describe the clinical outcomes associated with robot-assisted stereoelectroencephalography (SEEG) in children.

开云体育世界杯赔率

The authors performed a retrospective, single-center study in consecutive children with medically refractory epilepsy who were undergoing robot-assisted SEEG. Kaplan-Meier survival analysis was used to calculate the probability of seizure freedom. Both univariate and multivariate methods were used to analyze the preoperative and operative factors associated with seizure freedom.

RESULTS

Fifty-seven children underwent a total of 64 robot-assisted procedures. The patients’ mean age was 12 years, an average of 6.4 antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) per patient had failed prior to implantation, and in 56% of the patients the disease was considered nonlesional. On average, children had 12.4 electrodes placed per implantation, with an implantation time of 9.6 minutes per electrode and a 10-day postoperative stay. SEEG analysis yielded a definable epileptogenic zone in 51 (89%) patients; 42 (74%) patients underwent surgery, half of whom were seizure free at last follow-up, 19.6 months from resection. In a multivariate generalized linear model, resective surgery, older age, and shorter SEEG-related hospital length of stay were associated with seizure freedom. In a Cox proportional hazards model including only the children who underwent resective surgery, older age was the only significant factor associated with seizure freedom. Complications related to bleeding were the major contributors to morbidity. One patient (1.5%) had a symptomatic hemorrhage resulting in a permanent neurological deficit.

CONCLUSIONS

The authors report one of the largest pediatric-specific SEEG series demonstrating that the modern surgical management of medically refractory epilepsy in children can lead to seizure freedom in many patients, while also highlighting the challenges posed by this difficult patient population.

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Jason K. Hsieh, Swetha J. Sundar, Elaine Lu, Ansh Desai, Ajay Gupta, Ahsan N. Moosa, William Bingaman, Lara Jehi, and Juan Bulacio

OBJECTIVE

The objective of this paper was to investigate the factors associated with successful epileptogenic zone (EZ) identification and postsurgical seizure freedom in pediatric patients with drug-resistant epilepsy who underwent first-time stereoelectroencephalography (SEEG).

开云体育世界杯赔率

The authors conducted a retrospective cohort study of all consecutive patients younger than 18 years of age at the time of recommendation for invasive evaluation with SEEG who were treated from July 2009 to June 2020. The authors excluded patients who had undergone failed prior resective epilepsy surgery or prior intracranial electrode evaluation for seizure localization. For their primary outcome, the authors evaluated the relationship between clinical and radiographic factors and successful identification of a putative EZ. For their secondary outcome, the authors investigated whether these factors had a significant relationship with seizure freedom (according to the Engel classification) at last follow-up.

RESULTS

作者在本研究包括101例。年代EEG was safe, with no major morbidity or mortality experienced. The population was complex, with an MRI lesion present in less than 40% of patients and patients as young as 2.9 years included. A proposed EZ was identified in 88 (87%) patients. Patients with an older onset of epilepsy (OR 1.20/year, p = 0.04) or epilepsy etiology suspected to be due to a developmental lesion (OR 8.38, p = 0.02) were more likely to have proposed EZ identification. Patients with a preimplantation bilateral seizure-onset hypothesis (OR 0.29, p = 0.047) and those who underwent longer periods of monitoring (OR 0.86/day, p = 0.006) were somewhat less likely to have proposed EZ identification. The presence of an MRI lesion was a positive factor on secondary analyses (OR 4.18, p = 0.049; 1-tailed test). Fifty percent of patients who underwent surgical treatment with resection or laser ablation achieved Engel class I outcomes, in contrast to 0% of patients who underwent neuromodulation. Patients with a preimplantation hypothesis in the frontal/parietal lobes had increased odds of seizure freedom compared with patients with a hypothesis in other locations (OR 3.64, p = 0.01).

CONCLUSIONS

Pediatric SEEG is safe and often identifies a proposed resectable EZ. These results suggest that SEEG is effective in patients with frontal/parietal preimplantation hypothesis, with or without identified lesions on MRI.

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