Purpose <p>Patients with drug-resistant epilepsy (DRE) may experience significant limitations in their activities of daily living, social interactions, educational processes, and cognitive and artistic abilities. Epilepsy surgery aims primarily to achieve seizure control with drug-resistant epilepsy (DRE), but it may also lead to improvements in quality of life, including cognitive, emotional, and psychosocial recovery. This report presents a 16-year-old patient with DRE who demonstrated a remarkable improvement in artistic and educational abilities following temporal lobe surgery, illustrating the multifaceted benefits of surgical treatment.</p> Methods <p>An adolescent male with DRE since the age of eight years, characterized by focal seizures of temporal lobe origin, was evaluated with video-EEG, brain MRI, and FDG-PET. The patient underwent right temporal lobectomy after confirming mesial temporal sclerosis. His psychosocial, educational, and artistic progress were followed for two years postoperatively.</p> Results <p>Following surgery, the patient achieved complete seizure freedom, progressive cognitive improvement, and significant emotional stabilization. His artistic abilities, once limited by the burden of frequent seizures, evolved dramatically, as reflected by increasingly sophisticated and colorful paintings. His educational performance improved, leading to his successful admission to the fine arts program of the university.</p> Conclusion <p>This case presentation, with its fascinating drawings and paintings, aims to highlight that epilepsy surgery in adolescents with DRE can offer benefits beyond seizure control. Restoration of cognitive and creative capacities can substantially improve quality of life, academic performance, and psychosocial well-being, underscoring the broader impact of surgical intervention in pediatric epilepsy.</p>

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A gentle and colorful touch of epilepsy surgery on a young painter’s art and life: a case report with dramatic paintings

  • Leman Tekin Orgun,
  • Ayfer Sakarya Güneş,
  • Anıl Gök,
  • Altay Sencer,
  • Nerses Bebek,
  • Bülent Kara

摘要

Purpose

Patients with drug-resistant epilepsy (DRE) may experience significant limitations in their activities of daily living, social interactions, educational processes, and cognitive and artistic abilities. Epilepsy surgery aims primarily to achieve seizure control with drug-resistant epilepsy (DRE), but it may also lead to improvements in quality of life, including cognitive, emotional, and psychosocial recovery. This report presents a 16-year-old patient with DRE who demonstrated a remarkable improvement in artistic and educational abilities following temporal lobe surgery, illustrating the multifaceted benefits of surgical treatment.

Methods

An adolescent male with DRE since the age of eight years, characterized by focal seizures of temporal lobe origin, was evaluated with video-EEG, brain MRI, and FDG-PET. The patient underwent right temporal lobectomy after confirming mesial temporal sclerosis. His psychosocial, educational, and artistic progress were followed for two years postoperatively.

Results

Following surgery, the patient achieved complete seizure freedom, progressive cognitive improvement, and significant emotional stabilization. His artistic abilities, once limited by the burden of frequent seizures, evolved dramatically, as reflected by increasingly sophisticated and colorful paintings. His educational performance improved, leading to his successful admission to the fine arts program of the university.

Conclusion

This case presentation, with its fascinating drawings and paintings, aims to highlight that epilepsy surgery in adolescents with DRE can offer benefits beyond seizure control. Restoration of cognitive and creative capacities can substantially improve quality of life, academic performance, and psychosocial well-being, underscoring the broader impact of surgical intervention in pediatric epilepsy.