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Multimodality imaging in the surgical treatment of children with nonlesional epilepsy

Authors :
Joo Hee Seo
James L. Leach
Ki Hyeong Lee
Anna W. Byars
Paul S. Horn
Michael J. Gelfand
Hisako Fujiwara
Lili Miles
Katherine D. Holland
Ton J. deGrauw
Todd Arthur
Douglas F. Rose
Francesco T. Mangano
Leonid Rozhkov
Source :
Neurology. 76:41-48
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2010.

Abstract

To evaluate the diagnostic value of individual noninvasive presurgical modalities and to study their role in surgical management of nonlesional pediatric epilepsy patients.We retrospectively studied 14 children (3-18 years) with nonlesional intractable focal epilepsy. Clinical characteristics, surgical outcome, localizing features on 3 presurgical diagnostic tests (subtraction peri-ictal SPECT coregistered to MRI [SISCOM], statistical parametric mapping [SPM] analysis of [18F] FDG-PET, magnetoencephalography [MEG]), and intracranial EEG (iEEG) were reviewed. The localization of each individual test was determined for lobar location by visual inspection. Concordance of localization between each test and iEEG was scored as follows: 2=lobar concordance; 1=hemispheric concordance; 0=discordance or nonlocalization. Total concordance score in each patient was measured by the summation of concordance scores for all 3 tests.Seven (50%) of 14 patients were seizure-free for at least 12 months after surgery. One (7%) had only rare seizures and 6 (43%) had persistent seizures. MEG (79%, 11/14) and SISCOM (79%, 11/14) showed greater lobar concordance with iEEG than SPM-PET (13%, 3/14) (p0.05). SPM-PET provided hemispheric lateralization (71%, 10/14) more often than lobar localization. Total concordance score tended to be greater for seizure-free patients (4.7) than for non-seizure-free patients (3.9).Our data suggest that MEG and SISCOM are better tools for lobar localization than SPM analysis of FDG-PET in children with nonlesional epilepsy. A multimodality approach may improve surgical outcome as well as selection of surgical candidates in patients without MRI abnormalities.

Details

ISSN :
1526632X and 00283878
Volume :
76
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neurology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fd6d2ab3275fa62310db886c2b15f374
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1212/wnl.0b013e318204a380