Brief answer:
Tuberculoma calcified
Detailed answer:
Dear Dr. XXXXX
Hello
My best wishes for a speedy recovery to your relative.
I have gone through your patient’s history & ct scans in detail.
Patient has a moderately large left parietooccipital calcification with surrounding
gliosis.
Regarding surgical decompression may I suggest you to
1. Maintain a
seizure diary to actually see the seizure frequency.
2. Minimize the seizure frequency with adequate anticonvulsant medications.
3. In my opinion, if patient is neurologically intact & seizure frequency is less than one/month, then we should manage him conservatively.
4 . Surgical decompression is reserved only for cases, which are refractory to anticonvulsant medications (adequate), who have high seizure frequency .or have neurological deficits.
5 surgical procedures are for those patients whose lesions & seizures correlate clinically and neurophysiologically .
6. Surgical procedures for epilepsy etc carry risk of complications like
hemiplegia, infection, increased seizure frequency, etc. But risk ratio is decreasing in institutes where
epilepsy surgery is being done regularly.
7. For assessment get his fresh
mri brain /eeg/video eeg/serum drug levels for anticonvulsants & a thorough check up with neurology/neurosurgical team doing routine epilepsy surgeries.
Thanx
Hope this answers you query
Sorry for this unavoidable delay.
Dr XXXXXXX k XXXXXXX
Director
Deptt. Of neurosurgery