Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6016051 | Epilepsy Research | 2012 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Psychiatric outcomes of patients submitted to epilepsy surgery have gained particular interest given the high prevalence of pre-surgical psychiatric disorders (PD) in this population. The present study aimed to verify the possible pre-surgical predictors for psychiatric disorders following epilepsy surgery in a homogeneous series of patients with refractory temporal lobe epilepsy and mesial temporal sclerosis (TLE-MTS). Data from 115 TLE-MTS patients (65 females; 56.5%) who underwent cortico-amygdalohippocampectomy were included. Pre- and post-surgical psychiatric evaluations were performed using DSM-IV criteria. Pre-surgical PD - particularly mood, anxiety and psychotic disorders - were diagnosed in 47 patients (40.8%). Twenty-seven patients (54% of those with pre-surgical PD) demonstrated a remission of psychiatric symptoms on post-surgical psychiatric evaluation. Eleven patients (9.6%) developed de novo PD. The presence of pre-surgical depression (OR = 3.32; p = 0.008), pre-surgical interictal psychosis (OR = 4.39; p = 0.009) and epileptiform discharges contralateral to the epileptogenic zone (OR = 2.73; p = 0.01) were risk factors associated with post-surgical PD. Although epilepsy surgery is considered to be the best treatment option for patients with refractory TLE-MTS, the relatively high psychiatric comorbidities observed in surgical candidates and their possible negative impact on post-surgical outcomes require a careful pre-surgical evaluation of clinical, sociodemographic and psychiatric factors.
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Authors
Gerardo Maria de Araújo Filho, Lenon Mazetto, Francinaldo Lobato Gomes, Murilo Martinez Marinho, Igor Melo Tavares, LuÃs Otávio Sales Ferreira Caboclo, Ricardo Silva Centeno, Elza Márcia Targas Yacubian,