One-year postoperative autobiographical memory following unilateral temporal lobectomy for control of intractable epilepsy

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Abstract

Purpose: To examine the effects of temporal lobectomy (TL), particularly concerning its lateralization. Methods: Patients completed autobiographical memory tests, preoperatively and 1-year postoperatively. Results: (a) right TL (RTL) patients recalled significantly more memories from the year after surgery than from the year before TL; (b) their pre to postoperative improvement on autobiographical memory scores was positively correlated to improvement of delayed story recall scores; and (c) 1 year after surgery, performance on recent personal memory recall was normalized for RTL patients only. Conclusion: We suggest that, in the absence of recurrent seizures, the relative integrity of the left hemisphere together with residual right hemisphere structures sustains postoperative autobiographical memory consolidation, at least 1 year postoperatively. © 2007 International League Against Epilepsy.

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Voltzenlogel, V., Despres, O., Vignal, J. P., Kehrli, P., & Manning, L. (2007). One-year postoperative autobiographical memory following unilateral temporal lobectomy for control of intractable epilepsy. Epilepsia, 48(3), 605–608. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1528-1167.2006.00970.x

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