SummaryObjective: We determined whether the primary motor hand area was most frequently located in the precentral gyrus in young patients with intractable focal seizures.
Methods:Sixty-five patients with focal seizures aged between 5 months and 20 years who underwent a two-stage epilepsy surgery using chronic subdural-EEG monitoring were studied. Pairs of subdural electrodes were electrically stimulated, and the brain region with contralateral hand movement induced by the lowest-intense stimulus was defined as the primary motor hand area.Results: Contralateral hand movement was induced without afterdischarges in 50 children but not in the remaining 15 children. The unpaired t-test revealed that failure to induce contralateral hand motor movement was associated with younger age of subjects. Among the 50 patients with a positive motor response, the primary motor hand area was confined to the precentral gyrus in 9 patients, confined to the postcentral gyrus in 24, and located in both the pre-and post-central gyri in the remaining 17. The McNemar's test revealed that the observed frequency of 24 patients showing the primary motor hand area confined to the postcentral gyrus was larger than chance frequency. Logistic regression analysis failed to demonstrate that the observation of the primary motor hand area confined to the postcentral gyrus was associated with the age, the presence of dysplastic lesion or the seizure onset involving the frontal lobe.
Conclusion:Our study failed to support the traditionally-accepted notion that the primary motor hand area is most frequently located in the precentral gyrus but rather demonstrated that a substantial proportion of young patients had the primary motor hand area in the postcentral gyrus.
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