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.