1. Cognitive performance in distinct groups of children undergoing epilepsy surgery—a single-centre experience
- Author
-
Barbora Benova, Anezka Belohlavkova, Petr Jezdik, Alena Jahodová, Martin Kudr, Vladimir Komarek, Vilem Novak, Petr Liby, Robert Lesko, Michal Tichý, Martin Kyncl, Josef Zamecnik, Pavel Krsek, and Alice Maulisova
- Subjects
Drug resistant epilepsy ,Paediatric epilepsy surgery ,Malformations of cortical development ,Cognitive outcome ,Long-term epilepsy-associated tumours ,Medicine ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Background We aimed first to describe trends in cognitive performance over time in a large patient cohort (n = 203) from a single tertiary centre for paediatric epilepsy surgery over the period of 16 years divided in two (developing—pre-2011 vs. established—post-2011). Secondly, we tried to identify subgroups of epilepsy surgery candidates with distinctive epilepsy-related characteristics that associate with their pre- and post-surgical cognitive performance. Thirdly, we analysed variables affecting pre-surgical and post-surgical IQ/DQ and their change (post- vs. pre-surgical). Methods We analysed IQ/DQ data obtained using standardized neuropsychological tests before epilepsy surgery and one year post-surgically, along with details of patient’s epilepsy, epilepsy surgery and outcomes in terms of freedom from seizures. Using regression analysis, we described the trend in post-operative IQ/DQ. Cognitive outcomes and the associated epilepsy- and epilepsy surgery-related variables were compared between periods before and after 2011. Using multivariate analysis we analysed the effect of individual variables on pre- and post-operative IQ/DQ and its change. Results Epilepsy surgery tends to improve post-surgical IQ/DQ, most significantly in patients with lower pre-surgical IQ/DQ, and post-surgical IQ/DQ strongly correlates with pre-surgical IQ/DQ (Rho = 0.888, p
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF