Surgical treatment of epilepsy: the problem of lesion/focus incongruence

Surg Neurol. 1996 Dec;46(6):579-85; discussion 585-6. doi: 10.1016/s0090-3019(96)00214-5.

Abstract

Background: This study suggests an alternative surgical strategy for treating patients with intractable epilepsy in whom a lesion, visualized by imaging, is found to be at a distance from the maximal electroencephalographic abnormality (focus).

Methods: Sixty patients (divided into three groups of 20), all of whom have had surgical resection for intractable epilepsy, are reviewed. Group A patients, representing the most common situation of a congruent electroencephalographic focus and structural lesion, underwent resection of the lesion/focus. Group B patients, in whom the focus and the lesion are incongruent, underwent resection of the focus only. Group C patients are those where the focus and lesion are incongruent; in this group, the lesion only was resected.

Results: Group A patients underwent resection of the lesion/focus (sites: 13 temporal, six frontal, and one parietal) with excellent results. Group B patients, in whom the focus only was resected (lesion sites: 14 temporal, four parietal, and two occipital) obtained poor results. Group C patients had excellent results following resection of the lesion only (lesion sites: 12 temporal, seven frontal, and one parietal). The superior surgical outcome in seizure control of group C is comparable to that seen in group A (Chi2 contingency test; Chi2 = 3.27 p > .05, 3 degrees of freedom) and is in contrast to the poor results seen in group B (Chi2 = 20.59 p < .001, 3 degrees of freedom).

Conclusion: In those patients where a choice between a focus and a lesion is imperative, the lesion detected by imaging should be given priority in surgical resection.

MeSH terms

  • Brain Diseases / complications
  • Brain Diseases / pathology*
  • Brain Diseases / surgery*
  • Cerebral Angiography
  • Electroencephalography
  • Epilepsy / etiology
  • Epilepsy / pathology*
  • Epilepsy / surgery*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Magnetic Resonance Imaging
  • Male
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Tomography, X-Ray Computed
  • Treatment Outcome