Metabolic abnormalities in the temporal lobe (TL) of 25 patients suffering from temporal lobe epilepsy of mesiobasal or lateral TL origin have been investigated using interictal [18F]-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) positron emission tomography (PET). The epileptogenic area was determined by ictal EEG recordings using foramen ovale and scalp electrodes in 20 patients, and by the use of stereo-electroencephalography in one patient. Four patients with structural lesions on their MRIs had noninvasive ictal surface EEG recordings. Sixteen patients had a clear-cut mesiobasal seizure onset, and in five patients the seizures originated from the lateral temporal neocortex. Twenty-four patients underwent selective surgery. Patients with temporal limbic seizures associated with mesial gliosis (n = 15) had the lowest FDG uptake in the entire TL, followed by patients with lateral temporal seizure origin (n = 5). Patients with tumors located in the mesiobasal TL (n = 5) showed, in general, only a slight decrease of glucose metabolism in all TL structures. There was no clear-cut correlation between the degree of hypometabolism and the location of EEG-defined epileptogenic focus. The metabolic pattern, however, differed between the patient groups and allowed a discrimination between patients of mesial temporal and lateral temporal seizure onset.
We have studied 25 patients with interictal 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (18F-FDG) positron emission tomography (PET) before and after selective surgery for temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE). Based on the findings of the presurgical evaluation, including ictal intracranial EEGs, histopathologic findings, and the postoperative outcome, we classified the patients in three subgroups: (1) patients with TLE of lateral temporal origin (n = 5), (2) patients with mesiobasal limbic TLE associated with mesial gliosis (n = 14), and (3) patients with mesiobasal limbic TLE and small mesial tumors (n = 6). Postoperatively, patients with mesiobasal limbic TLE and mesial gliosis and five of six patients with mesiobasal limbic TLE and mesial tumors were seizure-free; the remaining sixth patient had one generalized seizure. Patients with TLE of lateral temporal origin had more than 90% reduction of seizure frequency. The main postoperative metabolic findings were as follows: (1) marked increase of regional cerebral metabolic rate of glucose (rCMRglu), both in the ipsilateral and, significantly, in the contralateral hemisphere in patients with mesiobasal limbic TLE and mesial gliosis-the changes of brain metabolism were characteristic for patients with the syndrome of "mesial temporal lobe epilepsy" (MTLE); (2) decrease of rCMRglu values in the contralateral mesiobasal temporal lobe (TL) cortex in all patient groups--the reduction of rCMRglu in homologous brain structures contralateral to the operated side provides evidence for stronger interhemispheric connections between both mesial TL structures than were hitherto supposed; and (3) a trend toward a normalization of rCMRglu values in the ipsilateral temporal neocortex 12 months after surgery in patients with MTLE syndrome.
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