The relationships of medical, developmental, social,
and familial variables to intellectual performances (IQ
scores) were assessed in a sample of 242 adult patients
with intractable lateralized temporal lobe epilepsy. Lower
IQ scores were associated with low patient and parent education.
In addition to the significant contributions of nonneurological
social and familial factors to IQ, early age at onset of
regular seizures and presence of primary neurological dysfunction
in the left cerebral hemisphere were also both independently
related to lower IQ. The obtained results suggest that
the occurrence of regular seizures during a critical period
in early childhood neural maturation poses the greatest
risk to cognitive development in the epilepsy population.
Total duration of seizures, history of severe convulsive
episodes, and the occurrence of another nonepileptic neurological
problem in early childhood do not contribute significantly
to delayed cognitive development. (JINS, 1997,
3, 252–259.)