Searched for: person:od4
Primary generalized epilepsy: a risk factor for seizures in labor and delivery?
Katz, Jeffrey M; Devinsky, Orrin
PURPOSE: Women in the United States who have epilepsy give birth to about 20000 newborns every year. Because seizures during late gestation and delivery may seriously affect the fetus, and because primary generalized tonic-clonic (GTC) seizures may occur during labor and delivery in 1-2% of women with epilepsy, we attempted to define the rate, risks, and causes of seizures during labor and delivery. METHODS: To characterize seizures during labor and delivery, we retrospectively analyzed 89 consecutive pregnancies of women with epilepsy on antiepileptic drugs (AEDs). Six epileptologists in our group had treated these patients. We confirmed data and acquired new information by telephone for 83.1% of the pregnancies, and categorized the women as having primary generalized or partial epilepsy. Most of the patients (78%) were on monotherapy during pregnancy; 20% took two AEDs, and 3% took three AEDs during that period. RESULTS: Seizures during labor and delivery occurred in 4/32 (12.5%) patients with primary generalized epilepsy, but in none of the 57 women with partial epilepsy (P<0.05). None of the 38 patients with therapeutic AED levels before labor and delivery had seizures, compared to 3/37 (8.1%) of the subtherapeutic group. However, drug levels were taken at variable times in relation to delivery, limiting their value. Also, the levels sampled were both total and free levels; the latter would be more helpful to determine the adequacy of AED drug coverage. CONCLUSIONS: Maintaining therapeutic AED levels during the last trimester may help prevent seizures during labor and delivery, especially in women with generalized epilepsy. Women with epilepsy who had subtherapeutic AED levels and had been seizure-free may be at-risk for seizures during labor and delivery. Our sample was small, and a random sampling bias may have affected the results
PMID: 12763468
ISSN: 1059-1311
CID: 60154
Surgical treatment of multifocal epilepsy involving eloquent cortex
Devinsky, Orrin; Romanelli, Pantaleo; Orbach, Darren; Pacia, Steven; Doyle, Werner
PURPOSE: This report describes our long-term follow-up for combined resective surgery and multiple subpial transections (MSTs) in patients with refractory epilepsy involving eloquent and noneloquent cortex in multiple lobes. Multiple independent seizure foci made these patients poor candidates for conventional surgery. METHODS: MST and resective surgery were used in 13 patients to treat localization-related refractory epilepsy involving eloquent and noneloquent cortex of two or more lobes. Preoperative investigation was followed by invasive monitoring. RESULTS: Eleven patients had MST plus resection involving two different lobes, and two patients had MST plus resection involving three different lobes. MSTs were performed on the primary sensorimotor cortex (eight patients), temporal language area (two patients), Broca's area (one patient), and on both frontal motor and temporal language areas (two patients). Nine patients had a two-stage procedure, and four patients had a three-stage procedure (two consecutive subdural grid studies followed by resections). Average follow-up was 59.2 months (range, 42-98 months). With a modified Engel Outcome Scale, four patients (31%) had a class I outcome; three (23%), class II; three (23%), class III; and three (23%), class IV. Ten (77%) patients had a >50% reduction of seizure burden. CONCLUSIONS: Combined MST and resection can meaningfully improve seizure control in patients with multifocal epilepsy involving eloquent cortex. Prospective randomized studies are needed
PMID: 12752473
ISSN: 0013-9580
CID: 60155
Dramatic changes in artistic preference after left temporal lobectomy - Reply [Letter]
Devinsky, O
ISI:000184747500014
ISSN: 1525-5050
CID: 98233
Late-onset epilepsy in focal cortical dysplasia of Taylor's type: A study of 20 patients [Meeting Abstract]
Siegel, AM; Cascino, GD; Elger, CE; Devinsky, O; Sperling, M; Crook, D; Lo Russo, G; Cossu, M; Scheithauer, B; Dubeau, F; Andermann, F
ISI:000187636400360
ISSN: 0013-9580
CID: 104266
Temporal lobe epilepsy and auditory symptoms - Reply [Letter]
Devinsky, O
ISI:000186518300023
ISSN: 0098-7484
CID: 104267
An effective neuropsychological screening battery for Hispanic epilepsy patients [Meeting Abstract]
Myers, L; Barr, WB; Vazquez, B; Devinsky, O
ISI:000184535300044
ISSN: 1385-4046
CID: 104268
Managing epilepsy and co-existing disorders
Ettinger, Alan B; Devinsky, Orrin
Boston : Butterworth-Heinemann, 2002
ISBN: 9780750672412
CID: 5327722
Neurological complications of pregnancy
Hainline, Brian; Devinsky, Orrin
Philadelphia, PA : Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2002
Extent: xvii, 341 p. ; 26 cm.
ISBN: 0781736218
CID: 1478542
Treatment of nonepileptic seizures
LaFrance, W Curt Jr; Devinsky, Orrin
Studies on nonepileptic seizures (NES) provide dichotomous data sets: extensive observational findings, but a paucity of controlled treatment data. Psychosocial stressors, whose full impact may lie outside a patient's awareness, often underlie NES. These stressors, along with patient's learned patterns of coping, may bring forth or potentiate comorbid psychiatric disorders. Patients with NES often have dysfunction in emotion regulation and family dynamics, as well as unemployment/disability. High percentages of comorbid disorders such as major depressive disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder, and cluster B personality with impulsivity (all disorders associated with serotonin system function) also exist in the NES population. The preliminary observational evidence suggests that specific psychotherapies and pharmacotherapy directed at comorbid conditions may be the most effective treatment for NES.
PMID: 12609316
ISSN: 1525-5050
CID: 159183
Cognition-induced epilepsy
Ritaccio AL; Singh A; Devinsky O
Cognition-induced epilepsy comprises a group of loosely tied syndromes characterized by seizures regularly precipitated by cognitive tasks. Linguistic operations (e.g., reading, writing) and decision making associated with visuospatial manipulation are the most frequent and best-characterized triggers. The syndromes reviewed have a high degree of overlap and clinical/EEG variability, suggesting that any of the neural networks subserving these complex tasks may promote seizures on either a topographic basis or a functional/connective basis. Treatment options include typical pharmacological and surgical interventions as well as stimulus alteration, threshold alteration, and avoidance conditioning. We postulate that more commonly encountered epilepsy syndromes also have complex triggers
PMID: 12609241
ISSN: 1525-5050
CID: 34394