Vagal nerve stimulation in the treatment of epilepsy Article

Alvarez, LA, Dean, P, Jayakar, P et al. (1999). Vagal nerve stimulation in the treatment of epilepsy . REVISTA DE NEUROLOGIA, 29(4), 385-387. 10.33588/rn.2904.99166

cited authors

  • Alvarez, LA; Dean, P; Jayakar, P; Duchowny, M; Resnick, T; Dunoyer, C; Koh, S

authors

abstract

  • Introduction. Vagal nerve stimulation is the latest therapeutic modality for the treatment of epilepsy. It consists of a lead implanted in the left vagal nerve which is connected to a subcutaneous stimulator implanted in the left axillary or pectorial region. Development. The stimulator is programmed to intermittently stimulate the vagal nerve throughout the day and a magnet also allows the patient to control the stimulation from the outside. This treatment has been used in patients with intractable partial seizures who are not candidates for epilepsy surgery. The results reported have varied but in general the procedure appears promising with at least 50% of the implanted having over 50% improvement in their seizure frequency and many having complete control without significant side effects. Conclusion. Further review of the results are still needed to fully determine the true value of this treatment and to identify the subgroups of patients which will benefit the most.

publication date

  • August 16, 1999

published in

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

start page

  • 385

end page

  • 387

volume

  • 29

issue

  • 4