News

Despite new approaches, surgery underused for epilepsy


 

EXPERT ANALYSIS FROM CURING THE EPILEPSIES 2013

Researchers also are trying to better understand epileptogenesis and how to reduce procedural side effects, including how to predict effects on cognitive function. To get there, "we need to understand more about how human cognition works," Dr. Chang said. Brain-mapping studies are showing that most aspects of cognition are not centered in one specific, focused area.

"Just like we’re thinking now that seizures are part of a distributed network, we also need to understand comorbidities and morbidity from surgical approaches in the same kind of framework," he said.

Until surgery is better used and studied, it is unlikely that neurology can move forward to truly understand the safety and effectiveness of the minimally invasive approaches, Dr. Chang said.

Dr. Chang has received grants from the National Institutes of Health and the Esther A. and Joseph Klingenstein Fund.

aault@frontlinemedcom.com

On Twitter @aliciaault

Pages

Recommended Reading

Implanted EEG Device Predicts Seizures in Early Study
MDedge Surgery
Gamma Knife Surgery Cuts Seizures in Tumor Patients
MDedge Surgery
Early Surgery Deemed Best for Drug-Resistant Epilepsy
MDedge Surgery
Study Spotlights Disparities in Specialized Epilepsy Care
MDedge Surgery
Study Finds Long-Term Benefits of DBS in Refractory Epilepsy
MDedge Surgery
Stereotactic laser ablation found feasible for hypothalamic hamartoma
MDedge Surgery