Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3051910 Epilepsy Research 2016 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Significant contralateral hippocampal atrophy occurs following TLE surgery.•Atrophy begins immediately and progresses over the first post-operative week.•Seizure free patients had significantly less hippocampal atrophy.•Using our instruments there are no cognitive deficits attributable to this atrophy.

ObjectiveDetermine the extent and time course of volumetric changes in the contralateral hippocampus following surgery for medically refractory temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE).MethodsSerial T1-weighted MRI brain scans were obtained in 26 TLE patients pre- and post-temporal lobe epilepsy surgery as well as in 12 control subjects of similar age. Patients underwent either anterior temporal lobectomy (ATL) or selective amygdalohippocampectomy (SAH). Blinded, manual hippocampal volumetry (head, body, and tail) was performed in two groups: 1) two scan group [ATL (n = 6); SAH (n = 10)], imaged pre-surgery and on average at 5.4 years post-surgery; and 2) longitudinal group [ATL (n = 8); SAH (n = 2)] imaged pre-surgery and on post-operative day 1, 2, 3, 6, 60, 120 and a delayed time point (average 2.4 years).ResultsIn the two scan group, there was atrophy by 12% of the unresected contralateral hippocampus (p < 0.001), with atrophy being most pronounced (27%) in the hippocampal body (p < 0.001) with no significant differences seen for the hippocampal head or tail. In the longitudinal group, significant atrophy was also observed for the whole hippocampus and the body with atrophy seen as early as post-operative day #1 which progressed significantly over the first post-operative week (1.3%/day and 3.0%./day, respectively) before stabilizing over the long-term to a 13% reduction in total volume. There was no significant difference in atrophy compared by surgical approach (ATL vs. SAH; p = 0.94) or side (p = 0.31); however, atrophy was significantly more pronounced in patients with ongoing post-operative seizures (hippocampal body, p = 0.019; whole hippocampus, p = 0.048). There were no detectable post-operative neuropsychological deficits attributable to contralateral hippocampal atrophy.SignificanceSignificant contralateral hippocampal atrophy occurs following TLE surgery, which begins immediately and progresses over the first post-operative week. The observation that seizure free patients had significantly less atrophy of the contralateral hippocampus after surgery suggests the possibility of an early post-operative imaging marker to predict surgical outcome.

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