For some children with epilepsy, surgery may be the most effective treatment option when their seizures don’t respond to medication or diet changes. The goal of epilepsy surgery is to find and treat the exact part of the brain where the seizures originate — to stop them, make them less severe, or help reduce seizures in cases where there’s no clear cause, such as with generalized epilepsy. At Boston Children’s Hospital’s Epilepsy Center, we specialize in diagnostic procedures, surgical options, and advanced neuromodulation therapies designed to better understand and treat your child’s seizures. Our goal is to deliver the least invasive, most effective, and safest treatment for your child to improve their quality of life.
At Boston Children’s, we take a multi-step, collaborative approach to treating epilepsy. We use advanced diagnostic tools such as high-resolution MRI, long-term monitoring, functional and metabolic testing and imaging, and invasive monitoring via stereo EEG (sEEG) — a surgical procedure that places electrodes in the brain through small holes in the skull — to pinpoint the area of the brain producing your child’s seizures and safeguarding key brain functions that must be preserved. Our multidisciplinary team of epilepsy surgeons, epileptologists, neuroradiologists, neuropsychologists, nurses, and social workers meets regularly to discuss each case and patient individually; this allows us to weigh all options and create a personalized treatment plan for your child.
If your child needs epilepsy surgery but the exact location of their seizures (seizure focus) is suspected but not confirmed using non-invasive testing, we often take a two-stage approach.
The first stage involves sEEG, where electrodes are placed in the brain to precisely locate the seizures and areas of the brain critical to key functions. Monitoring can take a week or so to ensure accuracy, so your child will stay in our Epilepsy Monitoring Unit (EMU) during the process.
In the second stage, we remove the electrodes and perform the necessary surgery — such as laser ablation or resection — in one session. This approach helps avoid the need for multiple rounds of anesthesia and hospital stays, making the treatment process less stressful for your child and your family. Unlike the traditional approach, which requires one surgery to remove the electrodes and a separate surgery to treat the epilepsy, our method combines everything into a single procedure.
Boston Children’s Epilepsy Surgery Program offers a variety of personalized treatment options to help manage your child’s seizures. Our approaches range from minimally invasive procedures to more extensive surgeries and neuromodulation treatments, each carefully chosen to provide the best possible outcome based on your child’s specific needs.
We provide several surgical options to treat your child’s epilepsy, from minimally invasive treatments like laser ablation to more extensive surgeries such as hemispherotomy. These include:
Through neuromodulation techniques such as nerve and brain stimulation, we help manage seizures by using electrical or magnetic stimuli to modify brain activity, avoiding more invasive surgery. Neuromodulation doesn’t usually provide a complete cure, but can significantly reduce seizures when a specific seizure focus doesn’t exist or can’t be safely targeted with resection or LITT. Types of neuromodulation techniques include: