“…Furthermore, gangliogliomas are among the most common epileptogenic lesions in epilepsy centers [21], harboring a major propensity for spontaneous electrical discharges which probably explains the association of this lesion to this unique syndrome [22]. Not unexpectedly, histological studies of cerebellar or fourth ventricle lesions presenting with subcortical epilepsy were classified as ganglioglioma [2,4,9,10,12,[23][24][25][26][27], hamartoma [8,13,14,28], gangliomatous hamartoma [29], ganglioneurocytoma [30][31][32] or low-grade dense fibrillary astrocytoma [3,15]. Although many of these lesions may carry a developmental origin and actually represent a continuum with FCD, some are not intrinsically epileptogenic [33].…”