While pre-surgery, most patients had multiple daily seizures (84%), 86% became seizure-free post-surgery. However, a significant proportion of patients acquired a postoperative diagnosis affecting each vision (94%), movement (86%), cognition (73%), hearing (19%), and endocrine function (12%). Relative to pre-surgery, significantly more patients had each of the following postoperatively (by decreasing postoperative prevalence): hemiplegia, hemianopsia, strabismus, aphasia, specific learning disability, intellectual impairment, dysgraphia, attention deficit disorder, amblyopia, cortical visual impairment, central auditory processing impairment, speech apraxia, autism, scoliosis, anxiety, early precocious puberty, dyscalculia, and generalized anxiety disorder. Notably, none of seizure etiology, resection side, seizure onset age, surgery age, or time from seizure onset to surgery could predict having at least one postoperative diagnosis in any domain or any postoperative diagnosis, except children with later surgery were significantly more likely to have a postoperative neuropsychological diagnosis; only depression was significantly associated with later surgery. Notwithstanding comorbidity, 99% of guardians reported improved patients' quality of life.