Artigo Revisado por pares

Significance of Sharp Waves in Routine EEGs After Epilepsy Surgery

1992; Wiley; Volume: 33; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1111/j.1528-1157.1992.tb02317.x

ISSN

1528-1167

Autores

Jaime Godoy, Hans O. Lüders, D. S. Dinner, Harold H. Morris, Elaine Wyllie, D. Murphy,

Tópico(s)

Advanced MRI Techniques and Applications

Resumo

We retrospectively analyzed the presence of sharp waves in 2-h EEGs performed 6 months after epilepsy surgery in 59 patients. To study the significance of the postoperative interictal epileptiform activity in the tissue remaining after resection, we included only patients with a single epileptic focus (as defined preoperatively by prolonged video/EEG recordings and subdural electrode arrays studies) and no progressive structural lesions. Temporal lobectomy was performed in 51 patients (86%); extratemporal resections were performed in the remainder. The epileptogenic focus was completely resected in 26 patients (44%). The immediate postoperative electrocorticograms (EcoG) showed spikes in 13 patients (22%). At 6-month follow-up, 43 patients (73%) were seizure-free or had auras only and 12 patients (20%) had epileptiform activity on EEG. A significant correlation was noted between presence of sharp waves in the 6-month postoperative EEG and recurrence of seizures (Fisher's exact test p = 0.011) and also with the extent of the resection (complete vs. incomplete p = 0.042). We noted no correlation between postoperative epileptiform activity and location of the resection (temporal vs. extratemporal), presence of spikes in immediate postoperative EcoG, or occurrence of auras only at 6-month follow-up.

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