Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3051688 Epilepsy & Behavior 2006 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

Ictal vomiting in patients with focal epilepsy has mostly been associated with an epileptogenic zone in the non-language-dominant hemisphere. Here we present the case of a left hemisphere language-dominant patient suffering from typical mesial temporal lobe epilepsy with histologically proven hippocampal sclerosis and ictal vomiting during complex partial seizures. He became seizure-free after selective left-sided amygdalohippocampectomy. This case implies that ictal vomiting may not necessitate invasive electrophysiological exploration of left hemisphere language-dominant patients with temporal lobe epilepsy if surface EEG and MRI indicate a left-sided epileptogenic zone. It thus corroborates that with concordant imaging and neurophysiological data, clinical signs become less valuable.

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