Authors
Elisabeth MS Sherman, Samuel Wiebe, Taryn B Fay‐McClymont, Jose Tellez‐Zenteno, Amy Metcalfe, Lisbeth Hernandez‐Ronquillo, Walter J Hader, Nathalie Jetté
Publication date
2011/5
Source
Epilepsia
Volume
52
Issue
5
Pages
857-869
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Description
Purpose: Epilepsy surgery is a safe surgical procedure, but it may be associated with cognitive changes. Estimates of the risk of decline in specific neuropsychological domains after epilepsy surgery would assist surgical decision making in clinical practice. The goal of this study was to conduct a systematic review to derive pooled estimates of the rate of losses and gains in neuropsychological functions after epilepsy surgery, using empirically based methods for quantifying cognitive change.
Methods: An extensive literature search using PubMed, EmBase, and the Cochrane database was conducted, yielding 5,061 articles on epilepsy surgery, with 193 on neuropsychological outcomes (IQ, memory, language, executive functioning, attention, and subjective cognitive changes).
Key Findings: Of these, 23 met final eligibility criteria, with 22 studies involving temporal surgery only. Key aspects of inclusion criteria …
Total citations
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