Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6009749 Epilepsy & Behavior 2016 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

•IQ before and one year after epilepsy surgery was evaluated in children.•Epilepsy-related variables were the strongest predictors of IQ.•Income quintile and residence location were not associated with IQ.•Multiple aspects of family environment should be evaluated in future research.

ObjectiveThe objective of this study was to evaluate the association between socioeconomic status and intellectual functioning in children with medically refractory epilepsy, before and after resective epilepsy surgery. Family environment is a strong contributor to cognitive development in children and has been recently shown to play a significant role in intellectual outcome after surgery in children with epilepsy.MethodsOne hundred children who had undergone resective epilepsy surgery and completed preoperative and postoperative assessments of IQ as part of clinical care were included in the study. We evaluated the impact of epilepsy-related variables, income quintile, and residence location on IQ.ResultsGreater improvements in IQ after surgery were associated with an older age at surgery (β = .235, p = .018). Higher IQ scores at follow-up were associated with an older age of seizure onset (β = .371, p < .001), older age at surgery (β = .356, p < .001), unilobar epileptogenic focus (β = .394, p < .001), and mesial temporal sclerosis (β = .338, p = .001) or tumor (β = .457, p < .001) in comparison with malformation of cortical development; age at seizure onset did not remain as a significant predictor in multivariable regression analysis. Income quintile, residence location, seizure control, and antiepileptic medication use were not significant predictors.ConclusionsEpilepsy-related variables were the strongest predictors of IQ and postoperative change in IQ. We were unable to identify a significant association between IQ and socioeconomic status. Future research should evaluate the impact of multiple aspects of family environment.

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Life Sciences Neuroscience Behavioral Neuroscience
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