Surgical management of cavernous malformations coursing with drug resistant epilepsy

Cerebral cavernous malformations (CM) are dynamic lesions characterized by continuous size changes and repeated bleeding. When involving cortical tissue, CM pose a significant risk for the development of drug-resistant epilepsy, which is thought to be result of an altered neuronal network caused by...

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Main Authors: Mario Arturo Alonso-Vanegas, Jose Miguel eCisneros-Franco, Taisuke eOtsuki
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2012-01-01
Series:Frontiers in Neurology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fneur.2011.00086/full
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spelling doaj-80ac855f00744cbea9a17a16f328e1d42020-11-24T21:18:16ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Neurology1664-22952012-01-01210.3389/fneur.2011.0008614668Surgical management of cavernous malformations coursing with drug resistant epilepsyMario Arturo Alonso-Vanegas0Jose Miguel eCisneros-Franco1Taisuke eOtsuki2Instituto Nacional de Neurologia y NeurocirugiaInstituto Nacional de Neurologia y NeurocirugiaNational Center of Neurology and PsychiatryCerebral cavernous malformations (CM) are dynamic lesions characterized by continuous size changes and repeated bleeding. When involving cortical tissue, CM pose a significant risk for the development of drug-resistant epilepsy, which is thought to be result of an altered neuronal network caused by the lesion itself and its blood degradation products. Preoperative evaluation should comprise a complete seizure history, neurological examination, epilepsy-oriented MRI, EEG, video-EEG, completed with SPECT, PET, functional MRI and/or invasive monitoring as needed. Radiosurgery shows variable rates of seizure freedom and a high incidence of complications, thus microsurgical resection remains the optimal treatment for CM coursing with drug-resistant epilepsy.Two thirds of patients reach Engel I class at three-year follow-up, regardless of lobar location. Those with secondarily generalized seizures, a higher seizure frequency, and generalized abnormalities on preoperative or postoperative EEG, show poorer outcomes, while factors such as gender, duration of epilepsy, lesion size, age, bleeding at the time of surgery, do not correlate consistently with seizure outcome. Electrocorticography and a meticulous removal of all cortical hemosiderin –beyond pure lesionectomy– reduce the risk of symptomatic recurrences.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fneur.2011.00086/fullelectrocorticographyDrug-resistant epilepsyepilepsy surgeryCavernous malformationPartial onset epilepsy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mario Arturo Alonso-Vanegas
Jose Miguel eCisneros-Franco
Taisuke eOtsuki
spellingShingle Mario Arturo Alonso-Vanegas
Jose Miguel eCisneros-Franco
Taisuke eOtsuki
Surgical management of cavernous malformations coursing with drug resistant epilepsy
Frontiers in Neurology
electrocorticography
Drug-resistant epilepsy
epilepsy surgery
Cavernous malformation
Partial onset epilepsy
author_facet Mario Arturo Alonso-Vanegas
Jose Miguel eCisneros-Franco
Taisuke eOtsuki
author_sort Mario Arturo Alonso-Vanegas
title Surgical management of cavernous malformations coursing with drug resistant epilepsy
title_short Surgical management of cavernous malformations coursing with drug resistant epilepsy
title_full Surgical management of cavernous malformations coursing with drug resistant epilepsy
title_fullStr Surgical management of cavernous malformations coursing with drug resistant epilepsy
title_full_unstemmed Surgical management of cavernous malformations coursing with drug resistant epilepsy
title_sort surgical management of cavernous malformations coursing with drug resistant epilepsy
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Neurology
issn 1664-2295
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Cerebral cavernous malformations (CM) are dynamic lesions characterized by continuous size changes and repeated bleeding. When involving cortical tissue, CM pose a significant risk for the development of drug-resistant epilepsy, which is thought to be result of an altered neuronal network caused by the lesion itself and its blood degradation products. Preoperative evaluation should comprise a complete seizure history, neurological examination, epilepsy-oriented MRI, EEG, video-EEG, completed with SPECT, PET, functional MRI and/or invasive monitoring as needed. Radiosurgery shows variable rates of seizure freedom and a high incidence of complications, thus microsurgical resection remains the optimal treatment for CM coursing with drug-resistant epilepsy.Two thirds of patients reach Engel I class at three-year follow-up, regardless of lobar location. Those with secondarily generalized seizures, a higher seizure frequency, and generalized abnormalities on preoperative or postoperative EEG, show poorer outcomes, while factors such as gender, duration of epilepsy, lesion size, age, bleeding at the time of surgery, do not correlate consistently with seizure outcome. Electrocorticography and a meticulous removal of all cortical hemosiderin –beyond pure lesionectomy– reduce the risk of symptomatic recurrences.
topic electrocorticography
Drug-resistant epilepsy
epilepsy surgery
Cavernous malformation
Partial onset epilepsy
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fneur.2011.00086/full
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