Background: Surgical sepsis is a syndrome occurring during the perioperative period with a high mortality rate. Since the one-hour bundle protocol was recommended to decrease sepsis-related morbidity and mortality in clinical practice, the protocol has been applied to surgical patients with sepsis and septic shock. However, clinical outcomes in these surgical patients remain unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Epilepsy surgery has been established for treatment of drug-resistant focal epilepsy. We aimed to determine long-term outcomes of epileptic surgery in various aspects including seizure outcome, quality of life, and psychosocial consequences after surgery.
Material And Method: A single center, cross-sectional study was conducted.
De novo psychiatric disorder following epilepsy surgery is an infrequent but very interesting phenomenon. The authors described 4 distinct cases with medically intractable epilepsy who had epilepsy surgery and developed postsurgical psychiatric disorder. The onset of psychiatric disorder was during dramatic improvement of their epilepsy after surgery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: To evaluate the safety and efficacy of epilepsy surgery in children and adolescence at Comprehensive Epilepsy Center, Phramongkutklao College of Medicine.
Material And Method: Children and adolescents, who underwent epilepsy surgery at Comprehensive Epilepsy Center, Phramongkutklao College of Medicine were identified from the epilepsy surgery database. The following parameters were evaluated: age at surgery, duration of seizure prior to surgery, presurgical work up, presurgical as well as postsurgical neurological/ seizure status and neuropathology (if applicable).