4.5 Article

Corpus Callosotomy for Controlling Epileptic Spasms: A Proposal for Surgical Selection

Journal

BRAIN SCIENCES
Volume 11, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/brainsci11121601

Keywords

corpus callosotomy; epilepsy surgery; epileptic spasms; West syndrome; adaptation; surgical selection

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The corpus callosotomy (CC) was first proposed as a surgical procedure for epilepsy, particularly for treating drop attacks. In recent years, there has been an increasing number of studies on using CC to treat epileptic spasms. Compared to resection surgeries, CC is more commonly used for patients without lesions observed on imaging or with bilateral lesions.
In 1940, van Wagenen and Herren first proposed the corpus callosotomy (CC) as a surgical procedure for epilepsy. CC has been mainly used to treat drop attacks, which are classified as generalized tonic or atonic seizures. Epileptic spasms (ESs) are a type of epileptic seizure characterized as brief muscle contractions with ictal polyphasic slow waves on an electroencephalogram and a main feature of West syndrome. Resection surgeries, including frontal/posterior disconnections and hemispherotomy, have been established for the treatment of medically intractable ES in patients with unilaterally localized epileptogenic regions. However, CC has also been adopted for ES treatment, with studies involving CC to treat ES having increased since 2010. In those studies, patients without lesions observed on magnetic resonance imaging or equally bilateral lesions predominated, in contrast to studies on resection surgeries. Here, we present a review of relevant literature concerning CC and relevant adaptations. We discuss history and adaptations of CC, and patient selection for epilepsy surgeries due to medically intractable ES, and compared resection surgeries with CC. We propose a surgical selection flow involving resection surgery or CC as first-line treatment for patients with ES who have been assessed as suitable candidates for surgery.

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