Epilepsy after cerebral infection: review of the literature and the potential for surgery

Epileptic Disord. 2017 Jun 1;19(2):117-136. doi: 10.1684/epd.2017.0916.

Abstract

The risk of unprovoked seizures in population-based cohorts of cerebral infection survivors is 7-8% in developed countries, rising to considerably higher rates in resource-poor countries. The main risk factors for epilepsy after cerebral infection, besides acute seizures, are infection-associated brain lesions and status epilepticus during the acute phase. Despite the high prevalence of pharmacoresistant epilepsies after cerebral infections, especially in patients with MRI-identifiable lesions, only a small minority undergoes epilepsy surgery. However, excellent surgical candidates are particularly those with a history of meningitis or encephalitis in early childhood, hippocampal sclerosis on MRI, as well as a history, seizure semiology, and EEG-findings compatible with the diagnosis of a mesial temporal lobe epilepsy syndrome. More challenging are patients with neocortical/extratemporal lobe epilepsies post cerebral infection. Finally, patients with a severe hemispheric injury with contralateral hemiparesis are candidates for hemispherectomy/hemispherotomy. This review attempts to shed some light on this frequent cause of symptomatic focal epilepsy, with an emphasis on the chances offered by epilepsy surgery.

Keywords: encephalitis; epilepsy surgery; herpes; meningitis; neurocysticercosis; refractory.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Epilepsy / etiology*
  • Epilepsy / surgery*
  • Humans
  • Infectious Encephalitis / complications*
  • Meningitis, Bacterial / complications*