Timothy J Kaufmann, Vance T Lehman, Jamie J Van Gompel, Lily C Wong-Kisiel, Kai J Miller
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background and objectives: Corpus callosotomy is an effective procedure approach for treating medication-resistant drop seizures, which pose a significant challenge in patients with epilepsy. Laser interstitial thermal therapy offers an alternative to open surgery for performing corpus callosotomy that may limit approach-related comorbidities. Practices vary regarding the number of laser filaments used and staging; outcome data for pediatric patients remain relatively limited.
Methods: We illustrate a set of 4 standardized trajectories for performing MRI-guided stereotactic laser corpus callosotomy (SLCC). For this retrospective cohort study in a pediatric neurosurgery practice, the medical records and imaging were reviewed for 10 consecutive patients who had medication-refractory drop seizures and underwent SLCC. Data collected and analyzed included patient and epilepsy characteristics, procedural details, surgical approaches, and clinical follow-up results.
Results: Over 2 years, complete, single-stage SLCC was performed in 8 patients, and posterior completion SLCC was performed in 2 patients who had previously had open anterior corpus callosotomy. Four laser fibers were used in four-eighth complete SLCC, and 3 fibers were used in four-eighth complete SLCC. Seven of 10 patients were discharged from the hospital on postoperative day 1, with only 1 requiring a maximum stay of 6 days. Five of 9 evaluable patients reported no drop seizures at the last clinical follow-up. In the other 4 patients, 1 experienced them only rarely, another experienced less than 25% preoperative frequency, and the remaining 2 had less than a 50% improvement. In addition, improvement in other seizure types exceeded 50% in 8 of 9 patients. Notably, no perioperative or postoperative complications were observed, nor were there any sustained neurological deficits reported.
Conclusion: Complete SLCC can be safely and effectively performed in pediatric patients. It is comparable in effectiveness with open surgery but has lower complication rates and shorter hospitalization.
期刊介绍:
Operative Neurosurgery is a bi-monthly, unique publication focusing exclusively on surgical technique and devices, providing practical, skill-enhancing guidance to its readers. Complementing the clinical and research studies published in Neurosurgery, Operative Neurosurgery brings the reader technical material that highlights operative procedures, anatomy, instrumentation, devices, and technology. Operative Neurosurgery is the practical resource for cutting-edge material that brings the surgeon the most up to date literature on operative practice and technique