Surgery of the amygdala and uncus: a case series of glioneuronal tumors.

Acta Neurochir (Wien)

Department of Neurosurgery, Medical College of Georgia, Augusta University, 1120 15th Street, BI 3088, Augusta, GA, 30912, USA.

Published: April 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focuses on patients with temporal lobe epilepsy due to lesions in the amygdala and uncus, emphasizing the need for surgical techniques that preserve the functional hippocampus.
  • The research included 13 patients with confirmed language-dominant epilepsy, all of whom underwent a selective surgery that removed the amygdala and uncus while leaving the hippocampus intact, resulting in successful outcomes.
  • Post-operative evaluations showed that the majority of patients maintained their cognitive functions and experienced significant seizure freedom, indicating the effectiveness of the surgical approach.

Article Abstract

Background: Patients with a lesion within the amygdala and uncus may develop temporal lobe epilepsy despite having functional mesial structures. Resection of functional hippocampus and surrounding structures may lead to unacceptable iatrogenic deficits. To our knowledge, there is limited descriptions of surgical techniques for selectively resecting the amygdala and uncus lesions while preserving the hippocampus in patients with language-dominant temporal lobe pathology.

Methods: Thirteen patients with language-dominant temporal lobe epilepsy related to amygdala-centric lesions were identified. Patients with sclerosis of the mesial structures or evidence of pathology outside of the amygdala-uncus region were excluded. Neuropsychological evaluation confirmed normal function of the mesial structures ipsilateral to the lesion. All patients were worked up with video-EEG, high-resolution brain MRI, neuro-psychology evaluation, and either Wada or functional MRI testing.

Results: All patients underwent selective resection of the lesion including amygdala and uncus with preservation of the hippocampus via a transcortical inferior temporal gyrus approach to the mesial temporal lobe. Pathology was compatible with glioneuronal tumors. Post-operative MRI demonstrated complete resection in all patients. Eight of the thirteen patients underwent post-operative neuropsychology evaluations and did not demonstrate any significant decline in tasks of delayed verbal recall or visual memory based on the Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test (RAVLT). One patient showed a slight decrease in confrontation naming using the Boston Naming Test (BNT). Seizure freedom (Engel class I) was achieved in 12 of 13 patients.

Conclusion: Selective transcortical amygdala and uncus resection with hippocampus preservation may be a reasonable way to achieve seizure control while sparing functional mesial structures.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7066292PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00701-020-04249-1DOI Listing

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