Risk reduction in dominant temporal lobe epilepsy surgery combining fMRI/DTI Maps, neuronavigation and intraoperative 1.5-tesla MRI

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Abstract

Background: In dominant temporal lobe epilepsy surgery, speech, memory and visual systems are at risk. Objective: Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and diffusion tensor imaging combined with intraoperative neuronavigation and MRI were investigated retrospectively regarding risk reductions for favorable neurological and seizure outcome. Methods: Functional imaging risk maps were generated for 14 patients suffering from dominant temporal lobe epilepsy [7 with hippocampal sclerosis (HS), 7 with various lesions] and used for neuronavigation-guided tailored resection. Postoperative neurological and seizure outcome and complications were evaluated. Results: None of the patients had postoperative speech dysfunction despite 2.3/3.6-cm mean hippocampal/neocortical resection. Verbal memory decline was found in 2 of the 14 (14.3%) patients, correlating with surgical lesions in fMRI memory-activated functional areas in the dominant posterior parahippocampal gyrus. Verbal memory scores did not statistically differ between the HS and the lesional group, neither pre- nor postoperatively. A contralateral visual field defect occurred in 1 patient (7.1%). An Engel class I seizure outcome was found in 12 patients (85.7%), and 11 were completely seizure free (78.6%) at a mean follow-up of 19.5 months. Conclusion: This retrospectively investigated protocol led to an excellent neurological and seizure outcome and a low complication rate in dominant temporal lobe epilepsy surgery.

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Rössler, K., Sommer, B., Grummich, P., Hamer, H. M., Pauli, E., Coras, R., … Buchfelder, M. (2015). Risk reduction in dominant temporal lobe epilepsy surgery combining fMRI/DTI Maps, neuronavigation and intraoperative 1.5-tesla MRI. Stereotactic and Functional Neurosurgery, 93(3), 168–177. https://doi.org/10.1159/000375173

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