Epilepsy Surgery

Epilepsy Surgery

Istanbul

Epilepsy Surgery in Istanbul is available at 12 hospitals in the Voumed network.

Epilepsy surgery is an option for people whose seizures continue despite proper medication, and for many of them it offers the realistic chance of becoming seizure free or having far fewer seizures. The key idea is precision: before any operation, a specialised team uses extended brain monitoring and detailed imaging to pinpoint exactly where the seizures begin, then decides whether that area can be safely removed or disconnected without harming important functions such as speech, movement and memory. When seizures are well controlled the change in daily life can be profound, restoring the freedom to drive, work, study and live independently. Many patients travel abroad for epilepsy surgery to reach experienced epilepsy teams, the advanced monitoring and imaging the evaluation depends on, and the coordinated neurology and neurosurgery care needed for a safe result, often with shorter waiting times than at home.

On this page

At a glance

Anaesthesia
general anaesthesia, or awake anaesthesia when the focus lies near speech or movement areas
Hospital stay
usually 3 to 6 days after the operation, with separate evaluation visits beforehand
Procedure time
about 3 to 6 hours, depending on the type of surgery
Recovery
home recovery over 4 to 8 weeks, with a gradual return to activity
Time before flying home
usually 2 to 3 weeks, once the wound has healed and the team approves
Results visible
seizure control is judged over months; many patients see a clear drop or full stop in seizures

What it is

Epilepsy surgery is a group of operations that treat epilepsy by addressing the small area of the brain where the seizures start, known as the seizure focus. The most common form is resective surgery, in which that focus is carefully removed; temporal lobe surgery, for seizures arising deep in the temporal lobe, is the best-established example and offers high rates of becoming seizure free in suitable patients. When the focus cannot be safely removed, disconnective surgery interrupts the pathways that let seizures spread, reducing their severity and frequency. For people who are not candidates for either, neuromodulation devices, such as a stimulator placed on a nerve in the neck, deliver regular pulses that lower seizure burden over time. Surgery does not suit everyone, but for carefully chosen patients with drug-resistant epilepsy it can change the course of the condition, and the goal is always to gain seizure control while protecting the brain's important functions.

When it is recommended

Surgery is considered for drug-resistant epilepsy, meaning seizures that continue despite two or more suitable, properly dosed medications, a situation that affects roughly one in three people with epilepsy. Continuing uncontrolled seizures carry real risks to safety, independence and quality of life, so once medication has failed, an early surgical evaluation is sensible rather than waiting indefinitely. The ideal candidate has a single, well-defined seizure focus in an area that can be removed without causing unacceptable loss of function. Surgery is also strongly considered when an underlying lesion, such as scarring, a developmental abnormality or a small tumour, is driving the seizures. Children with drug-resistant epilepsy are evaluated in the same careful way, and the developing brain often shows a remarkable ability to recover after successful surgery. The decision is always made by a team, only when the likely benefit clearly outweighs the risk.

How it is performed

The evaluation comes first and is as important as the operation. It typically includes extended video monitoring of brain activity to capture seizures, high-resolution MRI to find any structural cause, and tests of memory, language and other functions to map what must be protected; further functional and metabolic imaging may be added. When non-invasive tests cannot pinpoint the focus precisely, a staged procedure places fine electrodes inside the skull to record directly from the brain and map the exact area before any tissue is removed. The operation itself is usually carried out under general anaesthesia through a small opening in the skull, using a microscope, real-time navigation that overlays the imaging onto the surgical field, and continuous monitoring of nerve pathways so the team is alerted to any change. When the focus lies close to speech or movement areas, awake surgery lets the patient respond to testing while the surgeon works, maximising safety. Where the cause is a small tumour or abnormal tissue, fluorescence techniques can help make it visible. The operation usually takes about 3 to 6 hours.

Candidacy and preparation

A suitable candidate is someone with drug-resistant epilepsy whose seizures arise from an area that can be safely treated, confirmed through the detailed evaluation above. Not everyone is a candidate: if seizures come from several areas, or from a region essential for speech, movement or memory that cannot be spared, removal may not be advised, and neuromodulation may be offered instead. Preparation centres on completing the monitoring, imaging and neuropsychological testing that locate the focus and define the risks, followed by routine blood tests, heart checks and a medication review; epilepsy medicines are continued and adjusted around surgery on specialist advice. A clear discussion of the realistic chance of seizure freedom and the possible effects on function is an essential part of consent. For international patients, much of the early review can begin remotely: existing scans, monitoring results and seizure histories are assessed before travel, so the plan and any remaining tests can be arranged efficiently on arrival.

Recovery and planning your treatment abroad

After surgery most patients stay in hospital for about 3 to 6 days, during which the team watches for early seizures, monitors recovery and checks the wound before discharge. Headache and tiredness are common in the first weeks and settle steadily, while full recovery at home generally takes about 4 to 8 weeks with a gradual return to normal activity. Importantly, seizure control is judged over months rather than days, and epilepsy medication is usually continued for a period after surgery and then reduced slowly under specialist guidance based on how seizures respond. When planning treatment abroad, it is sensible to allow roughly 2 to 3 weeks in the destination city for any final evaluation, the surgery, wound healing and a follow-up review before flying. Air travel is generally safe once the team confirms the wound is healing well. Afterwards, follow-up continues remotely with shared records, scans and video, medication changes are coordinated with a specialist near home, and international patient teams provide interpreters and coordinators so language is never a barrier.

Risks, safety and results

In experienced hands and a properly equipped hospital, epilepsy surgery is a well-established treatment, and the thorough evaluation beforehand is designed specifically to keep it safe. As with any brain operation it carries some risk, including bleeding, infection, swelling and, depending on the area treated, temporary or, less often, lasting changes in memory, language, vision or movement; these possibilities are mapped out in advance so the plan protects what matters most. The benefit can be considerable: in well-selected patients, particularly those with a clear single focus such as temporal lobe epilepsy, a large proportion become free of disabling seizures, and many of the rest have far fewer. Becoming seizure free can mean returning to driving, work and independent life. Neuromodulation, when surgery to remove the focus is not possible, steadily lowers seizure burden rather than aiming for an immediate cure. With careful selection, precise surgery and close follow-up, most patients gain meaningful, lasting seizure control.

Frequently asked questions

These answers are general guidance and may vary by provider. Confirm the details with the hospital you choose.

Who is a candidate for epilepsy surgery?

Surgery is mainly for people with drug-resistant epilepsy, meaning seizures that continue despite two or more suitable medications, where a single seizure focus can be located and safely treated. A detailed evaluation with brain monitoring, imaging and memory and language testing decides whether you are a candidate and which procedure is safest for you.

How successful is epilepsy surgery?

For well-selected patients with a clear single focus, especially temporal lobe epilepsy, a large proportion become free of disabling seizures and many of the rest have far fewer. Results depend on the type of epilepsy, how precisely the focus is located and how completely it can be safely treated, and they are judged over months.

How many days will I need to stay abroad?

Plan for roughly 2 to 3 weeks in the destination city. This allows for any final evaluation, the surgery, a hospital stay of about 3 to 6 days, wound healing and a follow-up review before you are cleared to fly home; some patients also make an earlier visit for monitoring.

Will I still need medication after surgery?

Yes, at least for a while. Epilepsy medication is usually continued for a period after surgery and then reduced slowly under specialist guidance, depending on how your seizures respond. Some people who become fully seizure free are eventually able to lower or stop medication, but this is decided carefully over time.

When can I fly home after epilepsy surgery?

Most patients fly home once the wound has healed and the team confirms recovery is on track, usually around 2 to 3 weeks after surgery. Flying too early is avoided, so waiting for that clearance is the safe approach; your medication schedule for the journey will be planned for you.

Is epilepsy surgery done for children?

Yes. Children with drug-resistant epilepsy are evaluated with the same careful protocol, supported by paediatric specialists. The developing brain often shows a remarkable ability to recover after successful surgery, and treating seizures early can protect a child's learning and development.

What if the seizure focus cannot be located?

If standard non-invasive tests are not conclusive, a staged procedure can place fine electrodes inside the skull to record directly from the brain and map the focus precisely before any removal is attempted. If removal is still not safe or possible, neuromodulation options can lower the seizure burden over time.

Not sure which hospital fits your case?

Upload your medical records and let AI match you to the right hospital.

Upload records and get matched

Available at these hospitals

Specialties

Not sure which hospital fits your case?

Upload your medical records and let AI match you to the right hospital.

Upload records and get matched