Abstract

We examined the relationship between seizure outcomes and long-term changes in memory and intellectual function in 70 patients who had undergone temporal lobe resection for medically intractable epilepsy. Patients were assessed on four occasions: preoperatively (T1), 3months postoperatively (T2), 1year postoperatively (T3), and more than 5years postoperatively (T4). The majority of patients had stable memory function across the assessments. However, many were functioning below the 15th percentile on the test norms preoperatively, with little capacity for further decline. All patients who demonstrated a progressive decline in verbal or visual learning were female and continued to experience seizures postoperatively. Progressive postoperative declines in memory function are associated with poor postoperative seizure control. These patterns can be obscured in group analyses that do not take into account baseline levels of function. Neuropsychological scores must be set in the context of the norms of the test and the associated capacity for further significant change over time to maximize the clinical relevance of long-term surgical follow-up studies.

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