Late Recurrence of Intractable Epilepsy Associated with MRI-occult Pilocytic Astrocytoma in the Temporal Lobe Nine Years after Initial Removal : A case report with surgical and late-seizure recurrence observations
Hiroshima Journal of Medical Sciences Volume 60 Issue 2
Page 45-49
published_at 2011-06
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Title ( eng ) |
Late Recurrence of Intractable Epilepsy Associated with MRI-occult Pilocytic Astrocytoma in the Temporal Lobe Nine Years after Initial Removal : A case report with surgical and late-seizure recurrence observations
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Creator |
Nishimoto Takeshi
Iida Koji
Kagawa Kota
Watanabe Yosuke
Hashizume Akira
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Source Title |
Hiroshima Journal of Medical Sciences
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Volume | 60 |
Issue | 2 |
Start Page | 45 |
End Page | 49 |
Journal Identifire |
[PISSN] 0018-2052
[EISSN] 2433-7668
[NCID] AA00664312
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Abstract |
A 28-year-old male who presented a relapse of intractable epilepsy consisting of complex partial seizures with occasional secondary generalizations at the age of 26, had undergone removal of a left mesial temporal lobe tumor at another hospital at 18 years old. Pathological examination at that time revealed a low-grade astrocytoma, and the tumor was further treated by complementary adjuvant irradiation therapy. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings on admission portrayed a post-operative cavity anterior to the atrophied hippocampus on the left side with hyperintense in fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) images. There were no enhanced lesions in T1-weighted gadolinium images. As it was diagnosed as left mesial temporal lobe epilepsy with preoperative evaluations, the patient underwent left anterior temporal lobe resection (TLR). Intraoperative findings revealed that a small lump of grey tissue was attached to the anteromesial side of the sclerotic hippocampus. We surgically removed this and the tissue was a pilocytic astrocytoma. The patient has since remained seizure-free for 2.5 years. Seizure outcomes at postoperative 1-2 years are highly predictive of long-term outcomes after TLR for temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE). Late-seizure recurrence (> postoperative 2 years) with an initially successful outcome rarely occurs in TLR patients. This case report suggests that recurrence of even benign pilocytic astrocytomas may occur when seizure recurs in long-term follow-up.
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Keywords |
Temporal lobe tumoral epilepsy
Late recurrence
Pilocytic astrocytoma
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NDC |
Medical sciences [ 490 ]
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Language |
eng
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Resource Type | departmental bulletin paper |
Publisher |
Hiroshima University Medical Press
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Date of Issued | 2011-06 |
Rights |
(c) Hiroshima University Medical Press.
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Publish Type | Version of Record |
Access Rights | open access |
Source Identifier |
[ISSN] 0018-2052
[NCID] AA00664312
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