Name:
Textbook of Epilepsy Surgery PDF
Published Date:
07/11/2008
Status:
[ Active ]
Publisher:
CRC Press Books
Preface
It was just 7 years back, in 2001, that Dr. Youseff Comair and I edited the last book dedicated to epilepsy surgery.1 It is encouraging to note that epilepsy surgery has again made major advances, calling for a complete rewriting of essentially all the chapters of that book. Interestingly, the development of new diagnostic techniques, which certainly permit a more precise and reliable diagnosis of the epileptogenic zone, with very few exceptions, have not replaced some of the more classical diagnostic methods. In this sense, it is notorious that clinical semiology and clinical neurophysiology continue to be irreplaceable diagnostic techniques that provide a wealth of information. Moreover, modern technology, which makes recording, storage, and computer analysis of large amounts of neurophysiological data possible, gives us access to new data, such as the high-frequency oscillations or the EEG DC shifts, which promise to play important roles in the definition of the epileptogenic zone.
This Textbook of Epilepsy Surgery includes over 20 chapters dedicated exclusively to the history of epilepsy surgery in different countries. I felt that it was important to collect this information on a timely basis when many of the main players who actually participated in the development of epilepsy surgery, or at least directly witnessed the developments, are still active in the field.
As in our previous book on epilepsy surgery, in this book too we devote significant space to the description of the semiological seizure classification and the detailed clinical description of the epilepsies that are remediable by epilepsy surgery.
In this book, we follow a systematic approach to the diagnostic evaluation of patients who are candidates for epilepsy surgery. We first discuss the general principles of epilepsy surgery, and then divide the presurgical evaluation according to the six zones (symptomatogenic zone, irritative zone, ictal onset zone, the epileptic lesion, the functional deficit zone, and the epileptogenic zone) described in the general principles chapter. These series of chapters conclude with the description of the Epilepsy Surgery Management Meeting, an essential and indispensable part of the surgical evaluation.
The book also incorporates detailed discussions of the cortical mapping techniques and the numerous surgical techniques that can be used to surgically treat epilepsy. This is complemented by surgical outcome, the post-surgical medical management, surgical failures, and neuropathology. Finally, selected case presentations are discussed, and proposals for the establishment of an epilepsy surgery program, classification of surgical outcome, and protocols for storage and processing of brain tissue for molecular studies are presented.
I feel that epilepsy surgery is still an extremely attractive management tool for patients with medically intractable epilepsy. Unfortunately, in spite of dramatic increases in the number and mechanisms of action of modern antiepileptics, close to a third of all epileptics still suffer from uncontrolled seizures. A significant proportion of these patients are excellent surgical candidates. The extreme precision of our current presurgical evaluation methods and the recent advances in neurosurgical techniques make it imperative that all these patients get evaluated at an epilepsy center that offers epilepsy surgery. In a significant proportion of these patients, the epilepsy can be either eliminated (cured) or a significantly better seizure control can be achieved, with relatively low surgical risk. Referrals for epilepsy surgery have been continuously increasing since the pioneering efforts at the end of the 19th century. I hope that this book will contribute to making epilepsy surgery available to an even larger percentage of patients with medically intractable epilepsy.
| Edition : | 08 |
| Number of Pages : | 1624 |
| Published : | 07/11/2008 |
| isbn : | 978-0-203-091 |