Abstract

Epilepsy surgery is a common therapeutic option in humans with drug-resistant epilepsy. However, there are few reports of intracranial epilepsy surgery for naturally occurring epilepsy in veterinary medicine. A 12-year-old neutered male domestic shorthair cat with presumed congenital cortical abnormalities (atrophy) in the right temporo-occipital cortex and hippocampus had been affected with epilepsy from 3 months of age. In addition to recurrent epileptic seizures, the cat exhibited cognitive dysfunction, bilateral blindness, and right forebrain signs. Seizures had been partially controlled (approximately 0.3–0.7 seizures per month) by phenobarbital, zonisamide, diazepam, and gabapentin until 10 years of age; however, they gradually became uncontrollable (approximately 2–3 seizures per month). In order to plan epilepsy surgery, presurgical evaluations including advanced structural magnetic resonance imaging and long-term intracranial video-electroencephalography monitoring were conducted to identify the epileptogenic zone. The epileptogenic zone was suspected in the right atrophied temporo-occipital cortex and hippocampus. Two-step surgery was planned, and a focal cortical resection of that area was performed initially. After the first surgery, seizures were not observed for 2 months, but they then recurred. The second surgery was performed to remove the right atrophic hippocampus and extended area of the right cortex, which showed spikes on intraoperative electrocorticography. After the second operation, although epileptogenic spikes remained in the contralateral occipital lobe, which was suspected as the second epileptogenic focus, seizure frequency decreased to <0.3 seizure per month under treatment with antiseizure drugs at 1.5 years after surgery. There were no apparent complications associated with either operation, although the original neurological signs were unchanged. This is the first exploratory study of intracranial epilepsy surgery for naturally occurring epilepsy, with modern electroclinical and imaging evidence, in veterinary medicine. Along with the spread of advanced diagnostic modalities and neurosurgical devices in veterinary medicine, epilepsy surgery may be an alternative treatment option for drug-resistant epilepsy in cats.

Highlights

  • Epilepsy is a common functional cerebral disorder in cats and dogs

  • On the basis of these backgrounds, we report a feline case with structural drug-resistant epilepsy (DRE) that underwent intracranial epilepsy surgery with presurgical evaluations and its 1.5-year follow-up

  • Complete freedom from seizures was not achieved, we demonstrated that epilepsy surgery is feasible in a feline patient with epilepsy and could be an alternative therapy for veterinary patients with DRE

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Epilepsy is a common functional cerebral disorder in cats and dogs. At present, treatment of canine and feline epilepsy is almost limited to antiseizure drug (ASD) therapy. These results allowed us to identify the suspected epileptogenic zone in the right atrophic hippocampus and temporo-occipital cortex underlying ECoG electrodes #1, 3, and 9. If the epileptogenic zone presented in the right atrophic temporo-occipital cortex, indicating “extra-temporal or temporal neocortical (lateral temporal lobe) epilepsy,” the cat would be a candidate for focal cortical resection. If both, both resection surgeries would be needed. Excepting severe suppurative dermatitis, which was the direct cause of euthanasia, there was no lesion that might be related to the cause of dehydration and hypothermia at the end of life

DISCUSSION
B: No appreciable change C
DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT
Findings
ETHICS STATEMENT
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