Published: November 16, 2005
OR-Live.com Presents: Temporal Lobe Resection - A Treatment to Control Epilepsy
Live Webcast: Thursday, December 8, 2005 at 4 pm ET (21:00 UTC) From Tampa General Hospital
On Thursday, December 8, 2005 at 4 pm ET,
Fernando Vale, M.D., Associate Professor and Surgical Director of the
Epilepsy Center at the University of South Florida, and Vice Chief of the
Neurosciences Department at Tampa General Hospital, will perform live over
the Internet a temporal lobe resection to control epilepsy. The epilepsy
program at Tampa General Hospital is honored to be certified by the Joint
Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations. One hour of this
four-hour surgery will be broadcast.

During this broadcast, we will join Dr. Vale as he searches deep within the
temporal lobe of the brain, carefully viewing the ventricle and the
hipocampus, next to the brain stem. He will search for the area of seizure
onset. This area will be identified prior to surgery by a comprehensive and
multidisciplinary evaluation that includes EEG-video monitoring, MRI,
functional nuclear scans (PET, SPECT), and neuropsychological testing
including Wada testing. Often the area of seizure onset cannot be
identified visually, which is why this type of very specialized surgery is
only performed at level IV (the highest capabilities) epilepsy centers.
When identified, the area of seizure onset will be disconnected.
Disconnecting the abnormality is the most effective way to correct the
uncontrollable movements and repetitive behaviors that characterize
epilepsy.
Epilepsy is a misunderstood and often misdiagnosed disease that can be
cured. It causes the normal pattern of neuronal activity within the brain
to be disturbed. This can cause strange sensations, emotions, and behavior,
or sometimes convulsions, muscle spasms and loss of consciousness. Anything
that disrupts the normal pattern of neuron activity -- from illness to
brain damage to abnormal brain development -- can lead to seizures.
Seizures are diverse and can range from brief episodes of 'loss of contact'
or unresponsiveness, to full-blown body convulsions. When a person has had
two or more seizures they are considered to have epilepsy.
Epilepsy is a disease that must be controlled through medication or
surgery. Left uncontrolled, seizures can lead to self-injury, damage to the
brain, early dementia, quality of life deterioration and decreased life
expectancy.
Visit http://www.or-live.com/tgh/1333 now to learn more and view a program
preview. VNR: http://www.or-live.com/rams/tag-1333-mkw-q.ram
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