학술논문

Remote effects of temporal lobe epilepsy surgery: Long‐term morphological changes after surgical resection
Document Type
article
Source
Epilepsia Open, Vol 8, Iss 2, Pp 559-570 (2023)
Subject
brain atrophy
cortical thickness
cortical thinning
neurosurgery
seizure
virtual resection
Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system
RC346-429
Language
English
ISSN
2470-9239
Abstract
Abstract Objective Epilepsy surgery is an effective treatment for drug‐resistant patients. However, how different surgical approaches affect long‐term brain structure remains poorly characterized. Here, we present a semiautomated method for quantifying structural changes after epilepsy surgery and compare the remote structural effects of two approaches, anterior temporal lobectomy (ATL), and selective amygdalohippocampectomy (SAH). Methods We studied 36 temporal lobe epilepsy patients who underwent resective surgery (ATL = 22, SAH = 14). All patients received same‐scanner MR imaging preoperatively and postoperatively (mean 2 years). To analyze postoperative structural changes, we segmented the resection zone and modified the Advanced Normalization Tools (ANTs) longitudinal cortical pipeline to account for resections. We compared global and regional annualized cortical thinning between surgical treatments. Results Across procedures, there was significant cortical thinning in the ipsilateral insula, fusiform, pericalcarine, and several temporal lobe regions outside the resection zone as well as the contralateral hippocampus. Additionally, increased postoperative cortical thickness was seen in the supramarginal gyrus. Patients treated with ATL exhibited greater annualized cortical thinning compared with SAH cases (ATL: −0.08 ± 0.11 mm per year, SAH: −0.01 ± 0.02 mm per year, t = 2.99, P = 0.006). There were focal postoperative differences between the two treatment groups in the ipsilateral insula (P = 0.039, corrected). Annualized cortical thinning rates correlated with preoperative cortical thickness (r = 0.60, P