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find Author "HAN Yanming" 3 results
  • To study the clinical characteristics of epilepsy and the lateralition of epileptogenic zone in the tempor-parietal -occipital junction

    ObjectiveTo explore the clinical electrophysiology, seizure symptomatology, multimodal imaging characteristics and epileptogenic zone location of the temporal -parietal -occipital junction (TPOJ) epilepsy.MethodsThe seizure symptomatology, head MRI, PET-CT and their fusion manifestations, long-range scalp video EEG monitoring results of 6 cases of TPOJ epilepsy patients from March 2015 to August 2018 were analyzed retrospectively in the Second Hospital of Lanzhou University, and the value of localization of epileptogenic zone was analyzed, and the role of multi-modal evaluation based on SEEG in localization of epileptogenic zone was discussed.ResultsThe first symptoms: 2 of 6 patients were complicated visual hallucination; 3 were head eye deflection (2 were opposite to epileptogenic focus, 1 was ipsilateral); 1 was excessive movement. EEG of scalp: the epileptogenic potentials in intermittent period were all multi -brain regions, but could be lateralized; in seizure period, the electroencephalogram was diffuse in 4 cases, without lateralization, and could be lateralized in 2 cases (1 case was the beginning of one hemisphere, 1 case was the beginning of one posterior head). Imaging findings: MRI was negative in 2 cases, post-traumatic soft focus in 2 cases, and FCD in 2 cases; after fusion of MRI and PET-CT, low metabolic areas in a large area including TPOJ could be found. Six patients were implanted with stereotactic electrodes, and the epileptogenic focus could be identified by EEG monitoring after implantation.ConclusionFor TPOJ epilepsy, the manifestations of premonitory and multimodal images at the onset of seizure can provide important clues for the lateralition of epileptogenic zone; scalp EEG and the first symptoms except premonitory can only provide reference clues; multimodal evaluation based on stereoelectroencephalogram can accurately locate the onset of seizure.

    Release date:2021-01-07 02:57 Export PDF Favorites Scan
  • The discussion to improve the curative effect of stereo electroencephalogram-guided radiofrequency thermocoagulation for refractory epilepsy

    ObjectiveTo preliminarily explore the damage effect of stereo electroencephalogram-guided radiofrequency thermocoagulation after increasing the number of electrodes in the epileptic foci.MethodsEight cases were included from 42 patients requiring SEEG from the Department of Neurosurgery of the Second Hospital of Lanzhou University during June 2017 to Jan. 2019, of which 6 cases were hypothetical epileptogenic foci located in the functional area or deep in the epileptogenic foci that could not be surgically removed, 2 patients who were unwilling to undergo craniotomy; added hypothetical epileptic foci Electrodes, the number of implanted electrodes exceeds the number of electrodes needed to locate the epileptic foci. After radiofrequency thermocoagulation damages the epileptogenic foci, the therapeutic effect is analyzed.ResultsIn 8 patients, the number of implanted electrodes increased from 1 ~ 6, with an average of (4±2.2), and the number of thermosetting points increased by 2 ~ 10, with an average of (7±3.1); follow-up (9±3.2) months, Epilepsy control status: 3 cases of Engel Ⅰ, 3 cases of Engel Ⅱ, 2 cases of Engel Ⅲ; 8 cases of epileptic seizure frequency decreased≥50%. There was a statistically significant difference in the frequency of attacks before and after thermocoagulation (P<0.05).ConclusionsIncreasing the lesion volume of the epileptic foci can obviously improve the efficacy of epilepsy. SEEG-guided radiofrequency thermocoagulation is an effective supplementary method for classical resection.

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  • Analysis of the curative effect and predictive factors of frontal lobe epilepsy after surgery

    ObjectiveTo explore the long-term seizure outcome and prognostic factors of patients with frontal lobe epilepsy after surgery, so as to guide the evaluation of treatment and provide clinical reference.Methods This study retrospectively analyzed the clinical data of patients with frontal lobe epilepsy undergoing surgical treatment by multimodal epilepsy surgical evaluation system in the functional neurosurgery of the Second Hospital of Lanzhou University from January 2016 to February 2020, there were 17 males and 13 females, the age of onset of epileptic seizures was (16.30±10.65) years, the age at the time of surgical treatment was (23.98±11.04) years, and the duration of seizures was (7.68±6.37) years. The multimodal epilepsy surgical evaluation system includes phase I non-invasive evaluation and phase II invasive evaluation. The collected research variables were analyzed by descriptive statistics and multivariate logistic regression analysis to evaluate the importance of each research variable to the prognosis of epilepsy surgery, and to determine the potential prognostic factors, so as to explore the epilepsy control situation of patients with frontal lobe epilepsy after surgery and the influence of each variable that may affect the prognosis of epilepsy on the prognosis.ResultsThe analysis of the clinical data of 30 patients with frontal lobe epilepsy showed that the good prognosis rate after FLE surgery (Engel I) was 70%, and the average follow-up was (29.9±14.1) months. The results of multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that the duration of epilepsy, the frequency of seizures, the presence or absence of stereotactic EEG (SEEG) monitoring, whether the lesion was completely removed, and whether acute postoperative seizures occurred were independent predictors of prognosis (P<0.05).ConclusionThis study found that the long duration of epilepsy, frequent seizures, and postoperative acute seizures are significantly related to poor prognosis. The application of SEEG and complete resection of epileptic lesions can significantly improve the prognosis of FLE surgery.

    Release date:2021-06-24 01:24 Export PDF Favorites Scan
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