Objectives:To evaluate the diagnostic value of individual noninvasive presurgical modalities and to study their role in surgical management of nonlesional pediatric epilepsy patients. Methods:We retrospectively studied 14 children (3-18 years) Concordance of localization between each test and iEEG was scored as follows: 2 ϭ lobar concordance; 1 ϭ hemispheric concordance; 0 ϭ discordance or nonlocalization. Total concordance score in each patient was measured by the summation of concordance scores for all 3 tests.Results: 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) (p Ͻ 0.05). 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). Children with medically intractable epilepsy have been considered for epilepsy surgery if the epileptogenic zone is reasonably localized with noninvasive presurgical evaluation. Conclusions:1-3 Among available noninvasive tests, the most accurate and reliable tool for identification of seizure focus remains MRI. Presence of visible MRI lesion not only warrants surgical candidacy, but also predicts a favorable surgical outcome.4-7 Recent advances with high-resolution MRI may reveal the presence of brain lesions not previously detected. However, some patients continue to have no detectable lesions on MRI, despite the suggestion of a focal epileptogenic zone on seizure semiology and scalp EEG.When no lesion is seen on MRI, other noninvasive functional imaging modalities have been employed: peri-ictal SPECT and subsequent subtraction image coregistered to MRI (SISCOM) may visualize increased blood flow at the time of seizure 8,9 ; 2-deoxy-2-( 18 F)fluoro-D-glucose PET (FDG-PET) and subsequent voxel-based analysis using statistical parametric mapping (SPM) may visualize the areas of decreased metabolism 10 ; and magnetoencephalography (MEG)/magnetic source localization (MSI) may reveal the source of interictal/ictal epileptic discharges.
Pretreatment ictal connectivity differences in children with CAE were associated with response to antiepileptic treatment. This is a possible mechanism for the variable treatment response seen in patients sharing the same epilepsy syndrome.
The SIGFRIED (SIGnal modeling For Real-time Identification and Event Detection) software provides real-time functional mapping (RTFM) of eloquent cortex for epilepsy patients preparing to undergo resective surgery. The current study presents the first application of paradigms used in functional magnetic resonance (fMRI) and electrical cortical stimulation mapping (ESM) studies for shared functional cortical mapping in the context of RTFM. Results from the three modalities are compared. A left-handed 13-year old male with intractable epilepsy participated in functional mapping for localization of eloquent language cortex with fMRI, ESM, and RTFM. For RTFM, data were acquired over the frontal and temporal cortex. Several paradigms were sequentially presented: passive (listening to stories) and active (picture naming and verb generation.) For verb generation and story processing, fMRI showed atypical right lateralizing language activation within temporal lobe regions of interest (ROI) and bilateral frontal activation with slight right lateralization. Left hemisphere ESM demonstrated no eloquent language areas. RTFM procedures using story processing and picture naming elicited activity in the right lateral and basal temporal regions. Verb generation elicited strong right lateral temporal lobe activation as well as left frontal lobe activation. RTFM results confirmed atypical language lateralization evident from fMRI and ESM. We demonstrated the feasibility and usefulness of a new RTFM stimulation paradigm implementation during pre-surgical evaluation. Block design paradigms used in fMRI may be optimal for this purpose. Further development is needed to create age-appropriate RTFM test batteries.
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