Volume 47, Issue 11 pp. 1922-1930

Memory, Emotional and Vocational Impairments before and after Anterior Temporal Lobectomy for Complex Partial Seizures

Mario F. Dulay

Mario F. Dulay

Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation

Baylor Comprehensive Epilepsy Center

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Michele K. York

Michele K. York

Neurology

Baylor Comprehensive Epilepsy Center

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Elizabeth M. Soety

Elizabeth M. Soety

Neurosurgery

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Winifred J. Hamilton

Winifred J. Hamilton

Neurosurgery

Medicine

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Eli M. Mizrahi

Eli M. Mizrahi

Baylor Comprehensive Epilepsy Center

Peter Kellaway Section of Neurophysiology in Neurology

Pediatric Neurology

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Ian L. Goldsmith

Ian L. Goldsmith

Baylor Comprehensive Epilepsy Center

Peter Kellaway Section of Neurophysiology in Neurology

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Amit Verma

Amit Verma

Baylor Comprehensive Epilepsy Center

Peter Kellaway Section of Neurophysiology in Neurology

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Robert G. Grossman

Robert G. Grossman

The Methodist Hospital Neurological Institute, Houston, Texas, U.S.A.

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Daniel Yoshor

Daniel Yoshor

Neurosurgery

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Dawna D. Armstrong

Dawna D. Armstrong

Pathology, Baylor College of Medicine

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Harvey S. Levin

Harvey S. Levin

Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation

Baylor Comprehensive Epilepsy Center

Neurosurgery

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First published: 26 October 2006
Citations: 29
Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Harvey S. Levin, 1709 Dryden Road, Suite 725, Houston, TX 77030, U.S.A. E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

Summary: Purpose: To assess the pre- and postsurgical frequency of memory, emotional, and vocational impairments in patients who underwent anterior temporal lobectomy (ATL), and to assess the relationship between emotional disturbance and memory abilities after ATL.

Methods: Retrospective analysis of data was performed on 90 patients with medically intractable complex partial seizures who underwent ATL between 1981 and 2003. Patients were evaluated an average of 5 months before surgery and 11.3 months after surgery.

Results: A moderate to high frequency of memory impairment (44.4%; verbal or nonverbal), emotional disturbance (38.9%) and unemployment (27.8%) existed in the same individuals both before and after surgery. There were small to moderate rates of new onset memory (18.9%), emotional (11.1%), and vocational (7.8%) difficulties after surgery often regardless of seizure control outcome. Patients who underwent left-ATL and had emotional disturbance after surgery had the lowest verbal memory test scores.

Conclusions: Results highlight the importance of taking into account emotional status when assessing memory abilities after ATL. Results replicate the finding of moderate to high frequencies of memory impairment, emotional disturbance, and unemployment both before and after ATL. Results provide support for the rationale that cognitive, psychiatric and vocational interventions are indicated to mitigate the problems that exist before and persist after ATL.

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