Publication

Choroidal artery ischemic events after temporal lobe epilepsy surgery: clinical outcome, quality of life, and surgical pitfalls

Journal Paper/Review - Aug 27, 2021

PubMed
Doi

Citation
Delev D, Hakvoort K, Krüger M, Blume C, Clusmann H, Neuloh G. Choroidal artery ischemic events after temporal lobe epilepsy surgery: clinical outcome, quality of life, and surgical pitfalls. J Neurosurg 2021:1-7.
Type
Journal Paper/Review (English)
Journal
J Neurosurg 2021
Publication Date
Aug 27, 2021
Issn Electronic
1933-0693
Pages
1-7
Brief description/objective

OBJECTIVE
Ischemic events within the territory of the choroidal artery are an important cause of morbidity after temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) surgery. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the rate of these ischemic events, their clinical presentation, and impact on patients' health-related quality of life (HRQoL) after TLE surgery.

METHODS
Four hundred twenty-two consecutive patients undergoing temporal resections for drug-resistant TLE were retrospectively analyzed. All patients underwent presurgical multidisciplinary assessment using a standard protocol comprising clinical, neuroradiological, neuropsychological, and EEG data. Postoperative complications with corresponding imaging, neurological deficits, and disease-specific HRQoL questionnaires were evaluated.

RESULTS
The overall complication rate was 7.8% (n = 33). Fourteen patients (3.3%) suffered from ischemic events causing 6 permanent motor deficits, 3 with permanent aphasias, and 6 visual field defects that exceeded quadrantanopia. In 8 patients with anterior choroidal artery infarction, accounting for 57% of all ischemic events, infarction volume correlated positively with the occurrence of new permanent neurological deficits (8666 vs 1692 mm3, p = 0.032). Despite the occurrence of ischemic events, HRQoL improved in 71% of patients. However, infarction volume showed a negative correlation trend with HRQoL (Pearson's r = -0.390, p = 0.094). There was a trend toward increased risk for ischemic events in patients who underwent selective amygdalohippocampectomy compared to patients who underwent anterior temporal lobectomy or temporal lesionectomy (RR 0.96, 95% CI 0.93-0.99, p = 0.08).

CONCLUSIONS
Choroidal artery infarctions are rare but relevant complications after TLE surgery, presenting with variable clinical courses ranging from devastating neurological deterioration to complete recovery. Despite the occurrence of postoperative infarction, most patients report improvement of HRQoL after TLE surgery. This study showed that the type of surgery appears to modulate the risk for these ischemic events.