Surgical cure of intractable epilepsy caused by retained intracranial foreign body under cortical electroencephalography monitoring: case report and literature review
Zhigang Tan, Ming Wang, Jingwei Wan, Xinxin Li, Yan Cui

TL;DR
A patient with long-term drug-resistant epilepsy caused by a metal foreign body in the brain was successfully treated with surgery guided by brain monitoring.
Contribution
Demonstrates successful surgical treatment of intractable epilepsy caused by a retained intracranial foreign body using cortical EEG monitoring.
Findings
Precise localization of the foreign body and epileptogenic zone was achieved using preoperative imaging and neurophysiological techniques.
Surgical removal of the foreign body and resection of the epileptogenic focus led to effective seizure control.
Postoperative follow-up showed no seizure recurrence in the patient.
Abstract
Post-Traumatic Epilepsy is a common and severe complication following brain trauma. However, there are few reports on intractable epilepsy caused by retained foreign bodies. This article reports a case of a patient with a metal foreign body retained in the cranium for 20 years due to trauma, resulting in drug-resistant epilepsy which type is focal to bilateral tonic-clonic seizure. Through preoperative imaging and neurophysiological techniques, the foreign body and epileptogenic zone were precisely located. Intraoperative cortical electroencephalography monitoring was used to accurately remove the foreign body and resect the epileptogenic focus, which pathological result indicates gliosis and calcification. The intractable epilepsy was effectively controlled, and the patient experienced no seizures postoperatively.
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Taxonomy
TopicsEpilepsy research and treatment · Traumatic Brain Injury and Neurovascular Disturbances · Traumatic Ocular and Foreign Body Injuries
