24 research outputs found

    Low-dose stereotactic radiosurgery is inadequate for medically intractable mesial temporal lobe epilepsy: a case report

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    AbstractThe successful surgical treatment of medically refractory epilepsy is based on one of three different principles: (1) elimination of the epileptic focus, (2) interruption of the pathways of neural propagation, and (3) increasing the seizure threshold through cerebral lesions or electrical stimulation. Temporal lobe epilepsy, being the most common focal epilepsy, may ultimately require temporal lobectomy. This is a case report of a 36-year-old male with drug-resistant right mesial temporal lobe epilepsy who failed to obtain seizure control after stereotactic radiosurgery to the seizure focus. Complex-partial seizures occurred 6–7 times monthly, and consisted of a loss of awareness followed by involuntary movements of the right arm. EEG/CC TV monitoring indicated a right mesial temporal lobe focus, which was corroborated by decreased uptake in the right temporal lobe by FDG-PET and by MRI findings of right hippocampal sclerosis. Stereotactic radiosurgery was performed with a 4MV linac, utilizing three isocenters with collimator sizes of 10, 10, and 7 mm respectively. A dose of 1500 cGy (max dose 2535 cGy) was delivered in a single fraction to the patient’s right amygdala and hippocampus. There were no acute complications. Following radiosurgery the patient’s seizures were improved in both frequency and intensity for approximately 3 months. Antiepileptic medications were continued. Thereafter, seizures increased in both frequency and intensity, occurring 10–20 times monthly. At 1 year post radiosurgery, standard right temporal lobectomy including amygdalohippocampectomy was performed with subsequent resolution of complex-partial seizures. Histopathology of the resected temporal lobe revealed hippocampal cell loss and fibrillary astrocytosis, consistent with hippocampal sclerosis. No radiation-induced histopathologic changes were seen. We conclude that low-dose radiosurgery doses temporarily changed the intensity and character of seizure activity, but actually increased seizure activity long-term. If radiosurgery is to be an effective alternative to temporal lobectomy for medically intractable temporal lobe epilepsy, higher radiosurgery doses will be required. The toxicity and efficacy of higher-dose radiosurgery is currently under investigation

    Limiting artifact in CT stereotaxic periventricular procedures

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    Editorial

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    Intraoperative MRI with a rotating, tiltable surgical table: a time use study and clinical results in 122 patients

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    OBJECTIVE: The objective of our study was to evaluate intraoperative low-field MRI for the frequency and duration of imaging sessions needed during surgery, the direct additional procedure time attributable to imaging, and the proportion of cases in which information provided by intraoperative MRI led to a change in the procedure or otherwise was deemed valuable by operating surgeons. MATERIALS AND METHODS: One hundred twenty-two patients (65 males, 57 females; age range, 6-77 years; mean age, 43.8 years) underwent 130 neurosurgical and ENT procedures (106 craniotomies, 17 transsphenoidal pituitary resections, three biopsies, three intracranial cyst aspirations or injections, and one skull base resection) in a specially designed surgical MRI suite equipped with a 0.2-T imager and a prototype rotating, tiltable surgical table. The intraoperative MR sequences included free induction with steady-state precession (fast imaging with steady-state precession [FISP]), steady-state free precession T2-weighted, reverse fast imaging with steady-state free precession (PSIF), FLASH, spin-echo T1-weighted, turbo spin-echo (TSE) T2-weighted, and TSE FLAIR. Each case was analyzed for the number of imaging sessions, duration of each session, total imaging time during surgery, and impact of imaging information on procedure. RESULTS: Each patient underwent between one and five intraor postoperative imaging sessions. Imaging times were 1.7 seconds-8 minutes 31 seconds per sequence. The mean total imaging time was 35 minutes 17 seconds per surgical procedure. Imaging was continuous during biopsy and cyst aspiration procedures and averaged 200.67 and 54.66 minutes, respectively. Additional surgical resection based on intraoperative imaging findings was performed in 72.8% of the cases. CONCLUSION: Intraoperative low-field MRI provides valuable information for surgical decision making that is predominantly related to detection of residual tumor and the exclusion of complications. The benefits of this technology surpass the time cost associated with its implementation when using proper imaging strategies
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