Olivier Delalande
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Featured researches published by Olivier Delalande.
Epilepsia | 2011
Ingmar Blümcke; Maria Thom; Eleonora Aronica; Dawna D. Armstrong; Harry V. Vinters; André Palmini; Ts Jacques; Giuliano Avanzini; A. James Barkovich; Giorgio Battaglia; Albert J. Becker; Carlos Cepeda; Fernando Cendes; Nadia Colombo; Peter B. Crino; J. Helen Cross; Olivier Delalande; François Dubeau; John S. Duncan; Renzo Guerrini; Philippe Kahane; Gary W. Mathern; Imad Najm; Cigdem Ozkara; Charles Raybaud; Alfonso Represa; Noriko Salamon; Andreas Schulze-Bonhage; Laura Tassi; Annamaria Vezzani
Purpose: Focal cortical dysplasias (FCD) are localized regions of malformed cerebral cortex and are very frequently associated with epilepsy in both children and adults. A broad spectrum of histopathology has been included in the diagnosis of FCD. An ILAE task force proposes an international consensus classification system to better characterize specific clinicopathological FCD entities.
Epilepsia | 2006
J. Helen Cross; Prasanna Jayakar; Doug Nordli; Olivier Delalande; Michael Duchowny; Heinz G. Wieser; Renzo Guerrini; Gary W. Mathern
Summary: The Commission on Neurosurgery of the International League Against Epilepsy (ILAE) formed the Pediatric Epilepsy Surgery Subcommission in 1998 and charged it with formulating guidelines and recommendations for epilepsy surgery in childhood. Also endorsed by the Commission on Paediatrics, the following document is the consensus agreement after a meeting of 32 individuals from 12 countries in 2003. The panel agreed that insufficient class 1 evidence exists to recommend practice guidelines at this time. Instead, the panel generated criteria concerning the unique features of pediatric epilepsy patients to justify dedicated resources for specialty pediatric surgical centers, suggested guidelines for physicians for when to refer children with refractory epilepsy, and recommendations on presurgical evaluation and postoperative assessments. The panel also outlined areas of agreement and disagreement on which future research and consensus meetings should focus attention to generate practice guidelines and criteria for pediatric epilepsy surgery centers.
Neurosurgery | 2007
Olivier Delalande; Christine Bulteau; Georges Dellatolas; Martine Fohlen; Claude Jalin; Virginie Buret; Delphine Viguier; Georg Dorfmüller; Isabelle Jambaqué
OBJECTIVE Hemispherotomy techniques have been developed to reduce complication rates and achieve the best possible seizure control. We present the results of our pediatric patients who underwent vertical parasagittal hemispherotomy and evaluate the safety and global long-term outcome of this technique. METHODS Eighty-three patients underwent vertical parasagittal hemispherotomy by the same neurosurgeon (OD) between 1990 and 2000. We reviewed all patients between 2001 and 2003 for a standard global evaluation. The general principle is to achieve, through a posterior frontal cortical window, the same line of disconnection as performed with the classic hemispherectomy, while leaving the majority of the hemisphere intact along with its afferent and efferent vascular supply. METHODS Seventy-four percent of the patients were seizure-free; among them, 77% were seizure-free without further drug treatment. Twelve percent rarely had seizures (Engel Class II) and 14% continued to have seizures (Engel Class III or IV). The results varied according to the etiology, but this variation was not statistically significant. The early postoperative course was uneventful for 94% of the children, and shunt placement was necessary in 15%. We found a correlation between the preoperative delay and the Vineland Adaptive Behavior score: children with a longer duration of seizures had lower performances. CONCLUSION Vertical parasagittal hemispherotomy is an effective surgical technique for hemispheric disconnection. It allows complete disconnection of the hemisphere through a cortical window with good results in terms of seizure outcome and a comparably low complication rate.
Brain Pathology | 2006
Arielle Lellouch-Tubiana; Nathalie Boddaert; Marie Bourgeois; Martine Fohlen; Anne Jouvet; Olivier Delalande; David Seidenwurm; Francis Brunelle; Christian Sainte-Rose
Several types of glioneuronal tumors are known to induce intractable partial seizures in children and adults. The most frequent are dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumors (DNETs) and gangliogliomas. We report here a new clinicopathological entity within the spectrum of glioneuronal tumors observed in 10 children who underwent surgery for refractory epilepsy. These tumors demonstrate a unique, pathognomonic histological pattern and a specific appearance at magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The most striking neuropathological feature is an angiocentric polarity of the tumor with gliofibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) positive fusiform and bipolar astrocytic cells arranged around blood vessels (perivascular cuffing with tumoral astrocytes). Characteristic MRI findings include involvement of cortical gray and white matter, intrinsically high signal on T1‐weighted images, as well as a stalk like extension to the ventricle. Immunohistochemical neuronal markers (neurofilament protein, synaptophysin and chromogranin) confirm the presence of a neuronal cell component. Therefore, the term angiocentric neuroepithelial tumor (ANET) is proposed.
Neurosurgery | 2007
Sandrine de Ribaupierre; Georg Dorfmüller; Christine Bulteau; Martine Fohlen; Jean-Marc Pinard; Catherine Chiron; Olivier Delalande
OBJECTIVEA small percentage of tuberous sclerosis patients will develop a subependymal giant-cell astrocytoma. Given the morbidity and mortality when such a lesion is left undiagnosed, successive follow-up imaging in pediatric patients has been recommended. Surgical removal of the lesion has become the procedure of choice; however, the timing of this surgery is still a controversial subject. By analyzing our own series of data, as well as other published series, we have attempted to reach a consensus on the benefits of early versus late surgery. METHODSWe retrospectively reviewed 19 patients treated surgically for intraventricular tumors in Foch Hospital and at the Fondation Adolphe de Rothschild in Paris, France, and we analyzed published pediatric reports from 1980 to 2006. RESULTSThe results from our own population, as well as from other published pediatric series (15 series), indicate that subependymal giant-cell astrocytomas have a good prognosis when a macroscopically total resection has been performed. In our series, residual lesions tended to enlarge, but residual tumors remaining stable have been reported. Careful follow-up examination should be undertaken because late recurrences do occur. Larger or symptomatic lesions tend to have a higher morbidity. CONCLUSIONWe think that any lesion fulfilling the criteria for a subependymal giant-cell astrocytoma as previously described in the literature (lesion around the foramen of Monro, greater than 5 mm, with incomplete calcifications) should be removed as soon as clear evidence of growth has been confirmed.
Epilepsia | 1999
Jean Marc Pinard; Olivier Delalande; Catherine Chiron; C. Soufflet; Perrine Plouin; Y. Kim; Olivier Dulac
Summary: Purpose: To analyze the results of callosotomy in 17 children with symptomatic generalized epilepsy after West syndrome, according to the different seizure types and surgical procedures, to define selection criteria for candidates to callosotomy.
Epilepsy Research | 2002
Anne Lortie; Perrine Plouin; Catherine Chiron; Olivier Delalande; Olivier Dulac
To describe the poorly known characteristics of epilepsy during infancy in focal cortical dysplasia (FCD), one of the most frequent cause of infantile epilepsy. All 28 patients with FCD referred to two specialized centres were retrospectively studied regarding seizure characteristics, psychomotor evaluation, and response to medical and surgical treatment. All patients presented with early partial seizures. Semiology, but not the age of onset, depended on the topography of the dysplasia, with abnormal eye movements in all cases of posterior FCD. Eleven patients also developed infantile spasms (IS), mainly asymmetrical. IS were easily controlled with Vigabatrin or ACTH, but no partial seizures could be medically controlled except in one patient. All patients except one had abnormal neuropsychological findings. Fifteen patients had surgery, eight became seizure free, and seven were significantly improved regarding psychomotor development. Very early and refractory partial seizures, but easily controlled IS are the main characteristics of FCD in infancy. Only the focal ictal semiology may help differentiate the localization of FCD. Its intrinsic epileptogenicity could sustain this clinical pattern. Since the chances for medical control and normal neurodevelopment are poor, surgical treatment should be considered early in infants with FCD.
Neurosurgical Focus | 2008
Sandrine de Ribaupierre; Olivier Delalande; A. de Rothschild
The surgical treatment of intractable epilepsy has evolved as new technical innovations have been made. Hemispherotomy techniques have been developed to replace hemispherectomy in order to reduce the complication rates while maintaining good seizure control. Disconnective procedures are based on the interruption of the epileptic network rather than the removal of the epileptogenic zone. They can be applied to hemispheric pathologies, leading to hemispherotomy, but they can also be applied to posterior quadrant epilepsies, or hypothalamic hamartomas. In this paper, the authors review the literature, present an overview of the historical background, and discuss the different techniques along with their outcomes and complications.
Operative Neurosurgery | 2006
Emidio Procaccini; Georg Dorfmüller; Martine Fohlen; Christine Bulteau; Olivier Delalande
OBJECTIVE: Hypothalamic hamartomas (HHs) require surgical treatment in patients presenting with refractory epilepsy. METHODS: The authors report on a single-center series of 33 patients (24 males, 9 females) who underwent surgery between January 1997 and April 2004. They experienced several types of seizure (gelastic, tonic, partial, atonic, generalized tonic-clonic, dacrystic, infantile spasm, mental retardation, and behavioral and endocrinological abnormalities). Forty-nine interventions were carried out. Every patient, with the exception of the first, underwent hamartoma disconnection (pterional approach, six patients; endoscopy, 15 patients; both, 11 patients). The endoscopic approach was carried out with a frameless stereotactic system to enhance feasibility and efficacy of the disconnecting procedure. RESULTS: Surgery-related neurological complications occurred in two patients, both after a pterional microsurgical approach. Furthermore, two patients experienced panhypopituitarism and one patient experienced transitory central insipid diabetes. All patients but one showed recovery or considerable improvement of their epilepsy (Engel Class 1, 48.5%; Engel Class 2, 3%; Engel Class 3, 45.5%; mean follow-up duration, 1 yr 7 mo). CONCLUSION: According to the proposed classification of sessile HH into four types, the best candidates for endoscopic disconnection are Type 2 and Type 3 HHs. In the present series, 90% of patients affected by Type 2 HH became seizure free and the remaining 10% improved; of those with Type 3 HH at presentation, 35.3% recovered and 60% improved. Neuropsychological and endocrinological test results showed improvement in many patients. Data from our series demonstrate that frameless stereotactic endoscopic disconnection should be considered as the treatment of choice in the presence of favorable anatomic conditions.
Neuropsychologia | 2008
Nathalie Golouboff; Nicole Fiori; Olivier Delalande; Martine Fohlen; Georges Dellatolas; Isabelle Jambaqué
The amygdala has been implicated in the recognition of facial emotions, especially fearful expressions, in adults with early-onset right temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE). The present study investigates the recognition of facial emotions in children and adolescents, 8-16 years old, with epilepsy. Twenty-nine subjects had TLE (13 right, 16 left) and eight had fronto-central epilepsy (FCE). Each was matched on age and gender with a control subject. Subjects were asked to label the emotions expressed in pictures of childrens faces miming five basic emotions (happiness, sadness, fear, disgust and anger) or neutrality (no emotion). All groups of children with epilepsy performed less well than controls. Patterns of impairment differed according to the topography of the epilepsy: the left-TLE (LTLE) group was impaired in recognizing fear and neutrality, the right-TLE (RTLE) group was impaired in recognizing disgust and, the FCE group was impaired in recognizing happiness. We clearly demonstrated that early seizure onset is associated with poor recognition of facial expression of emotion in TLE group, particularly for fear. Although right-TLE and left-TLE subjects were both impaired in the recognition of facial emotion, their psychosocial adjustment, as measured by the CBCL questionnaire [Achenbach, T. M. (1991). Manual for the Child Behavior Checklist and Youth Self-report. Burlington, VT: University of Vermont Department of Psychiatry], showed that poor recognition of fearful expressions was related to behavioral disorders only in children with right-TLE. Our study demonstrates for the first time that early-onset TLE can compromise the development of recognizing facial expressions of emotion in children and adolescents and suggests a link between impaired fear recognition and behavioral disorders.