Surgical treatment of epilepsy resistant to drug therapy. A review

1991 
The prevalence of epilepsy is 7-9 cases per 1,000 population, corresponding to 440,000 individuals in Denmark. Approximately 1/4 of these individuals have seizures refractory to anticonvulsant medications and most of them have an epileptic focus in the temporal lobe. Epilepsy refractory to anticonvulsant medication is an incapacitating disease with high costs for the person and the society. The main problems are polypharmacy with side effects, suspicion of neurodegenerative consequences and a higher mortality. The modern era of epilepsy surgery began more than 100 years ago and since then, the developments in neurophysiology and neuroimaging have made it possible to demonstrate the epileptic focus with relatively high precision. As a consequence of this, the volume of the resected tissue has diminished and the operative complications become less frequent. The somatic and neuropsychological effects of a cortical resection are discrete and compensated by a general improvement in performance. Surgical treatment of epilepsy should no longer be considered as a last resort, but as a realistic treatment in cases of medication failure.
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