
doi: 10.1007/pl00013725
pmid: 11219628
We wished to find whether there was any difference in the postoperative seizure outcome between patients with bisynchronous anterior-dominant and those with posterior-dominant EDs after anterior callosotomy.Seizure outcomes after anterior callosotomy in 7 patients with bisynchronous posterior-dominant epileptiform discharges and in 54 patients with anterior-dominant seizures were compared. All 61 cases had been followed up for more than 2 years after operation. One patient (14.3%) had become seizure free. Two patients (28.6%) had more than 50% reduction in seizure frequency, but 4 patients (57.2%) showed no improvement at all. The percentage of cases with significant improvement (more than 50% reduction of seizure frequency) was 43% (3 in 7), which is lower than in the patients with bisynchronous anterior-dominant EDs (64.8%).Our preliminary results suggest that anterior partial callosotomy could still be helpful in cases with bisynchronous posterior-dominant epileptiform discharges but the prognosis may be less optimistic than for those with anteriorly located discharges.
Male, Epilepsy, Treatment Outcome, Child, Preschool, Humans, Female, Child, Severity of Illness Index, Corpus Callosum, Follow-Up Studies
Male, Epilepsy, Treatment Outcome, Child, Preschool, Humans, Female, Child, Severity of Illness Index, Corpus Callosum, Follow-Up Studies
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