E Bellido-Castillo, A López-Sala, J Aparicio, D Cuadras, A Palacio-Navarro
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This research also pretends to provide evidence about the relationship of VEM performance with other relevant demographical and clinical factors such as sex, age at onset of seizures, age at surgery and duration of epilepsy, as well as to study the impact of presurgical VEM performance on postsurgical outcomes.</p><p><strong>Patients and methods: </strong>Pre-operative and one-year follow-up post-operative word-list recall scores from 25 children who underwent TLE surgery (left-sided, n = 11; right-sided, n = 14) were extracted from the Hospital Sant Joan de Deu database and were retrospectively analyzed.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>No significant presurgical intergroup differences were found when comparing VEM scores by laterality of epilepsy (p > 0.5). Looking at the left TLE group, a high negative correlation was found between the onset age and the pre-operative long-term free recall score (rho = -0.72, p = 0.01). No significant pre- to post-operative intragroup changes were found regarding VEM performance, regardless of epilepsy laterality (left TLE group, p > 0.56; right TLE group, p > 0.12).</p><p><strong>Conclusions: </strong>The laterality of epilepsy does not show to be a significant factor in and of itself regarding presurgical VEM outcome and its prognosis one year after surgery, thus supporting the bilateral memory representation hypothesis. Furthermore, a younger age at onset of seizures seems to be related with a better pre-operative VEM performance, likely due to a more efficient reorganization of memory system induced by a greater brain plasticity at lower ages; however, this relationship has been only reported for the left-sided epilepsies in our sample.</p>","PeriodicalId":21281,"journal":{"name":"Revista de neurologia","volume":"78 3","pages":"61-71"},"PeriodicalIF":0.8000,"publicationDate":"2024-02-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11064967/pdf/","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Verbal episodic memory in children undergoing temporal lobe epilepsy surgery: a one-year follow-up study.\",\"authors\":\"E Bellido-Castillo, A López-Sala, J Aparicio, D Cuadras, A Palacio-Navarro\",\"doi\":\"10.33588/rn.7803.2022308\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><strong>Introduction: </strong>Verbal episodic memory (VEM) is often unimpaired in children with focal epilepsy undergoing left temporal lobe resections, unlike what we might expect in the adult brain. The latter findings suggest that epileptiform activity in early life disrupts memory system lateralization, leading to the development of bilateral memory representation. The present study aims to analyze whether the laterality of epilepsy is a major predictor for post-operative VEM prognosis in pediatric temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) surgery. This research also pretends to provide evidence about the relationship of VEM performance with other relevant demographical and clinical factors such as sex, age at onset of seizures, age at surgery and duration of epilepsy, as well as to study the impact of presurgical VEM performance on postsurgical outcomes.</p><p><strong>Patients and methods: </strong>Pre-operative and one-year follow-up post-operative word-list recall scores from 25 children who underwent TLE surgery (left-sided, n = 11; right-sided, n = 14) were extracted from the Hospital Sant Joan de Deu database and were retrospectively analyzed.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>No significant presurgical intergroup differences were found when comparing VEM scores by laterality of epilepsy (p > 0.5). Looking at the left TLE group, a high negative correlation was found between the onset age and the pre-operative long-term free recall score (rho = -0.72, p = 0.01). No significant pre- to post-operative intragroup changes were found regarding VEM performance, regardless of epilepsy laterality (left TLE group, p > 0.56; right TLE group, p > 0.12).</p><p><strong>Conclusions: </strong>The laterality of epilepsy does not show to be a significant factor in and of itself regarding presurgical VEM outcome and its prognosis one year after surgery, thus supporting the bilateral memory representation hypothesis. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
简介接受左侧颞叶切除术的局灶性癫痫患儿的言语外显记忆(VEM)通常不受影响,这与我们对成人大脑的预期不同。后者的研究结果表明,生命早期的癫痫样活动会破坏记忆系统的侧化,导致双侧记忆表征的发展。本研究旨在分析癫痫的偏侧性是否是预测小儿颞叶癫痫(TLE)手术后VEM预后的主要因素。本研究还希望提供证据,说明VEM表现与其他相关人口学和临床因素(如性别、癫痫发作年龄、手术年龄和癫痫持续时间)之间的关系,并研究术前VEM表现对术后结果的影响:从Sant Joan de Deu医院数据库中提取了25名接受TLE手术的儿童(左侧,11人;右侧,14人)的术前和术后一年随访的单词表回忆得分,并对其进行了回顾性分析:结果:在比较不同癫痫侧位的VEM评分时,未发现手术前组间存在明显差异(P > 0.5)。左侧TLE组的发病年龄与术前长期自由回忆评分呈高度负相关(rho = -0.72,p = 0.01)。无论癫痫的侧位如何(左侧TLE组,p > 0.56;右侧TLE组,p > 0.12),术前和术后组内的VEM表现均无明显变化:癫痫的偏侧性本身并不是影响术前 VEM 结果和术后一年预后的重要因素,因此支持双侧记忆表征假说。此外,癫痫发作的年龄越小,术前的VEM表现越好,这可能是由于低年龄时大脑的可塑性越强,记忆系统重组的效率越高;然而,在我们的样本中,只有左侧癫痫患者出现了这种关系。
Verbal episodic memory in children undergoing temporal lobe epilepsy surgery: a one-year follow-up study.
Introduction: Verbal episodic memory (VEM) is often unimpaired in children with focal epilepsy undergoing left temporal lobe resections, unlike what we might expect in the adult brain. The latter findings suggest that epileptiform activity in early life disrupts memory system lateralization, leading to the development of bilateral memory representation. The present study aims to analyze whether the laterality of epilepsy is a major predictor for post-operative VEM prognosis in pediatric temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) surgery. This research also pretends to provide evidence about the relationship of VEM performance with other relevant demographical and clinical factors such as sex, age at onset of seizures, age at surgery and duration of epilepsy, as well as to study the impact of presurgical VEM performance on postsurgical outcomes.
Patients and methods: Pre-operative and one-year follow-up post-operative word-list recall scores from 25 children who underwent TLE surgery (left-sided, n = 11; right-sided, n = 14) were extracted from the Hospital Sant Joan de Deu database and were retrospectively analyzed.
Results: No significant presurgical intergroup differences were found when comparing VEM scores by laterality of epilepsy (p > 0.5). Looking at the left TLE group, a high negative correlation was found between the onset age and the pre-operative long-term free recall score (rho = -0.72, p = 0.01). No significant pre- to post-operative intragroup changes were found regarding VEM performance, regardless of epilepsy laterality (left TLE group, p > 0.56; right TLE group, p > 0.12).
Conclusions: The laterality of epilepsy does not show to be a significant factor in and of itself regarding presurgical VEM outcome and its prognosis one year after surgery, thus supporting the bilateral memory representation hypothesis. Furthermore, a younger age at onset of seizures seems to be related with a better pre-operative VEM performance, likely due to a more efficient reorganization of memory system induced by a greater brain plasticity at lower ages; however, this relationship has been only reported for the left-sided epilepsies in our sample.