Social functioning of children after epilepsy surgery: A literature review

Publication date

2019-07

Authors

Braams, Olga B.
Maher, Caragh
Jennekens-Schinkel, Aag
Braun, Kees P JISNI 0000000395904311
van Nieuwenhuizen, OnnoISNI 0000000384430894
van Schooneveld, MoniqueISNI 0000000394149983
Schappin, RenskeORCID 0000-0002-5727-5852ISNI 0000000394818702

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Article

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Abstract

This literature review on social functioning of children after epilepsy surgery is based on 24 papers addressing two categories of social functioning: social cognition (n = 4)and general social functioning (n = 20). Overall, studies that compared with healthy peers revealed children who had undergone epilepsy surgery to have more problems in both social cognition and general social functioning. Half of the studies found some improvement in social functioning in the first year(s)after epilepsy surgery, but this pertained to general social functioning, not to social cognition. The persistence of the problems in social cognition after surgery may be related to the critical period of brain maturation, lacking improvement of impairments in related cognitive domains or to a defective underlying brain condition — rather than to the epilepsy. Problems in general social functioning may be explained by the adjustments the children and their families had to make because of the child's drug-resistant epilepsy and difficulties to adjust to the new situation after surgery. The neurological and behavioral explanations are likely to be interrelated in light of the multifaceted and complex nature of social functioning. Epilepsy surgery does not appear to solve the problems in social functioning associated with having had drug-resistant epilepsy. As social functioning is an important aspect of healthy development, it should be assessed comprehensively in order to obtain a knowledge base that allows 1)proper treatment of children with epilepsy (CwE)and 2)counseling patients and families prior to and after epilepsy surgery.

Keywords

Epilepsy surgery, Child, Social functioning, Social cognition, Theory of Mind, Theory of mind, Clinical Neurology, Neurology, Behavioral Neuroscience, Review, Journal Article

Citation

Braams, OB, Maher, C, Jennekens-Schinkel, A, Braun, KPJ, van Nieuwenhuizen, O, van Schooneveld, MMJ & Schappin, R 2019, 'Social functioning of children after epilepsy surgery : A literature review', Epilepsy & Behavior, vol. 96, pp. 210-218. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.yebeh.2019.04.037