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Depression and anxiety improve after epilepsy surgery
December 13, 2005
Depression and anxiety are common problems for people whose epilepsy cannot be controlled by medication. A new study found that depression and anxiety improve significantly after epilepsy surgery. The study, which is published in the December 13, 2005, issue of Neurology, the scientific journal of the American Academy of Neurology, found that the rate of depression and anxiety disorders decreased by more than 50 percent up to two years after the surgery. People who no longer experienced any seizures after surgery were even more likely to be free of depression and anxiety.
"These results are important because depression and anxiety can significantly affect the quality of life," said study author Orrin Devinsky, MD, Professor of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry at New York University School of Medicine and Director of the NYU Comprehensive Epilepsy Center. "For people with refractory epilepsy, studies show that depression is more likely to affect their quality of life than how often they have seizures or how many drugs they have to take."
The study involved 360 people in seven U.S. epilepsy centers who were undergoing epilepsy surgery to remove the area of the brain producing the seizures. Epilepsy surgery is generally reserved for those whose seizures cannot be adequately controlled by medication. The majority of participants had surgery on the brain's temporal lobe. The participants' mental health and any symptoms of depression and anxiety were evaluated before surgery and at three months, one year, and two years after surgery.
Prior to the surgery, 22 percent of the participants met the criteria for a diagnosis of depression, compared to 9 percent two years after the surgery. For anxiety disorders, 18 percent met the criteria for a diagnosis before the surgery, compared to 10 percent two years after the surgery.
Of those who had no seizures following surgery, 8 percent met the criteria for depression, compared to 18 percent of those who still had some seizures after surgery. For anxiety, 8 percent of those who were seizure free had depression, compared to 15 percent of those with ongoing seizures.
Researchers aren't sure why depression and anxiety improve after epilepsy surgery. "Removing dysfunctional areas of the brain may be critical," Devinsky said. "Whether the benefit comes from reducing or eliminating seizures or other effects is not clear. People may also be benefiting from an improved sense of self-control, less fear of seizures, higher activity levels and a lessened burden from medications."
New York University Medical Center and School of Medicine
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Textbook of Epilepsy Surgery
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Textbook of Epilepsy Surgery covers all of the latest advances in the surgical management of epilepsy, including new neuroimaging techniques; new surgical strategies; more aggressive surgical approaches in cases with catastrophic epilepsies; better understanding of epileptogenic mechanisms in etiologically different types of epilepsy; new surgical techniques and neuronavigation systems; and improved statistics of surgical outcome in different epilepsy types. This definitive textbook is an invaluable tool and reference source for Neurologists, Neurosurgeons, Epilepsy Specialists and those interested in epilepsy and its surgical treatment.
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Operative Techniques in Epilepsy Surgery
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Operative Techniques in Epilepsy Surgery is an essential guide to the latest techniques and therapeutic strategies for the surgical management of patients with epilepsy. Distinguished pioneers in the field provide comprehensive coverage of the range of operative approaches, helping clinicians to thoroughly prepare for surgery. The book first discusses surgical planning and then presents techniques for cortical resection and various types of intraoperative mapping. The final sections of the book describe innovative approaches, such as neuromodulation and radiosurgery.<br><br>Features:<br>-Guidelines from leading experts in the field of epilepsy surgery <br>-Detailed step-by-step descriptions of procedures, including practical information on image guidance and...
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Epilepsy Surgery: Principles and Controversies (Neurological Disease and Therapy)
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Beyond my Control: One Man's Struggle with Epilepsy, Seizure Surgery & Beyond
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Stuart Ross McCallum shares a true account of his battle with epilepsy-beginning with the peculiar sensations he experienced as a teenager that led to his diagnosis and concluding with his eventual recovery from a temporal lobe lobectomy.McCallum vividly describes his twenty-year journey of living with epilepsy and how this unpredictable disease has not only impacted his life but the lives of everyone around him. For years he operated a business and managed his staff while battling an ever-increasing number of seizures. As his condition worsened and his postseizure responses became more intense, he was often prone to violent outbursts that threatened his safety as well as the safety of those in his inner circle. McCallum shares how the perception of the disease and the socially...
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Epilepsy: Surgery [VHS]
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The Cleveland Clinic Foundation, OH. Comprehensive reference on the surgical treatment of the epilepsies. Presents a global view of contemporary approaches to presurgical evaluation, surgical treatment, and postsurgical assessment. Details effective surgical techniques, data for outcomes, and strategies for preventing and managing complications. DNLM: Epilepsy--surgery.
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There was never the remotest possibility in my mind that I could ever understand, much less attain, a lifestyle free from the bondage of regular seizure invasion. I did not realize I was consumed in an ill mindset. Hope did not exist for me. In that place of sunken defeat, a new light emerged. A doctor who didn't believe in defeat offered me an opportunity so seductive I couldn't turn away. First, I had to believe. He wanted to tamper with my brain. The operation was merely a start. When my doctor released me from his clinic, I was mentally unprepared. I had always been a victim. The surgery set in adult puberty. But more, social consequences failed me and I was forced to fall back on my soul's core. There I found my calling and my gift. I found me. Soon, with the help of my mentor, I...
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The Treatment of Epilepsy
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A practical reference to the medical and surgical treatment of epilepsy The third edition of The Treatment of Epilepsy has been thoroughly updated. It is a reference work, but has a strong practical bias, and is designed to assist neurologists, neurosurgeons and other clinicians at all levels who are involved in the treatment of patients with epilepsy. It is a definitive source of clinical information to guide clinical practice and rational therapy. Written and edited by leading experts, many actively involved with the International League Against Epilepsy, this new edition: covers the recent advances in the principles and approaches to epilepsy therapy, the introduction of new drugs and the development of new surgical techniques contains 26 completely...
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