Volume 50, Issue 11 pp. 2408-2419

Language development before and after temporal surgery in children with intractable epilepsy

Trudi De Koning

Trudi De Koning

Departments of Otorhinolaryngology

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Huib Versnel

Huib Versnel

Departments of Otorhinolaryngology

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Aag Jennekens-Schinkel

Aag Jennekens-Schinkel

Pediatric Neuropsychology

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Monique M. J. Van Schooneveld

Monique M. J. Van Schooneveld

Pediatric Neuropsychology

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Philippe H. Dejonckere

Philippe H. Dejonckere

Departments of Otorhinolaryngology

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Peter C. Van Rijen

Peter C. Van Rijen

Neurosurgery

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Onno Van Nieuwenhuizen

Onno Van Nieuwenhuizen

Child Neurology, Rudolf Magnus Institute of Neuroscience, University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands

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on behalf of the Dutch Collaborative Epilepsy Surgery Programme (DuCESP)

on behalf of the Dutch Collaborative Epilepsy Surgery Programme (DuCESP)

Departments of Otorhinolaryngology

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First published: 23 October 2009
Citations: 21
Address correspondence to Huib Versnel, F02.504, Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Rudolf Magnus Institute of Neuroscience, University Medical Center Utrecht, P.O. Box 85500, 3508 GA Utrecht, The Netherlands. E-mail: [email protected]

Summary

Purpose: To obtain systematic knowledge of language development before and after epilepsy surgery in regions that, if damaged, are known to entail language impairment in adults.

Methods: Twenty-four children (mean age 11 years; range 5.8–15.7 years) with pharmacologically intractable epilepsy participated prior to (the majority) anterior temporal lobectomy and 6, 12, and 24 months thereafter. Reception and production of lexicon (vocabulary) and syntax (sentence structure including grammar) were examined using developmental language tests that provide normative data.

Results: Prior to surgery the mean language delay varied from 1.7 years (productive syntax) to 3.5 years (productive lexicon). For lexicon, language delay was larger, the older the children; for syntax it was smaller in children with mothers with higher education. Over the 2 years following surgery, the children developed in all four language components. Development was, however, slower than normal, that is, language delay increased, in three of the four components: in productive lexicon it continued to increase, and in receptive lexicon and productive syntax it appeared to stabilize during the second year. Receptive syntax developed at a normal pace. The development of productive lexicon was remarkably slow when surgery and language mediation were both in the left hemisphere.

Discussion: Pharmacologically intractable epilepsy of the temporal lobe, or the underlying condition, is a significant risk factor for delayed language development. Temporal epilepsy surgery does not result in acceleration of language development. If language is still mediated in the operated left hemisphere, development of particular language components may slow down after surgery.

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