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1.
Malow BA  Selwa LM  Ross D  Aldrich MS 《Epilepsia》1999,40(11):1587-1592
PURPOSE: To determine the lateralizing value of interictal epileptiform discharges (IEDs) recorded during overnight sleep-EEG studies in temporal lobe epilepsy. Because IEDs are more prevalent in non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep than in wakefulness, overnight sleep-EEG recordings may contribute additional lateralizing information to the epilepsy surgery evaluation beyond daytime EEGs. METHODS: Twenty-four subjects with medically refractory temporal lobe epilepsy underwent continuous overnight sleep-EEG recordings. Subjects were seizure free > or =24 h before study and receiving stable doses of medication. The IED foci recorded on overnight studies were compared with daytime EEGs, interictal samples, and ictal recordings during long-term monitoring, brain magnetic resonance images (MRIs), and surgical outcome. RESULTS: (a) In all 24 subjects, including 13 without IEDs on daytime EEGs, temporal IEDs were present during NREM sleep and were exclusively or predominantly (>95%) unilateral in 15 and bitemporal in nine. (b) Unilateral NREM IEDs were concordant with surface or depth ictal-onset regions in 14 subjects, even if MRIs were normal (three subjects) or surface ictal-onset regions were bilateral (five subjects). Eleven of 12 subjects with unilateral concordant NREM IEDs who have undergone surgery are seizure free. (c) Bitemporal IEDs were associated with postoperative seizures in all subjects with normal MRIs or widespread MRI abnormalities. However, all subjects with bitemporal IEDs and MRI hippocampal abnormalities concordant with ictal-onset regions had good to excellent surgical outcomes. CONCLUSIONS: When combined with other investigations, IEDs recorded on overnight studies add prognostic data to the epilepsy surgery evaluation not provided by daytime EEGs.  相似文献   

2.
OBJECTIVE: In mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE), the rate of correct seizure lateralization of ictal semiology and ictal EEG is better for patients with unilateral interictal spikes (UIS) than for patients with bilateral interictal spikes (BIS), possibly due to rapid seizure propagation patterns associated with bilateral epileptogenesis. In this study, the authors investigated if ictal SPECT is a reliable diagnostic test for both UIS and BIS patients. METHODS: Video-EEG recording was used as the gold standard to examine the accuracy of ictal SPECT and its relationship with interictal and ictal EEG. Ninety-three consecutive patients with MTLE associated with hippocampal sclerosis were included in the analysis. Ictal SPECT was considered accurate if two blinded observers independently lateralized the scan correctly. RESULTS: Ictal SPECT correctly lateralized 75 (80.6%) of 93 scans. The rate of correct seizure lateralization was 87.6% for the UIS group and only 55.0% for the BIS group (p = 0.0027). In the EEG epochs, 66.7% of BIS patients vs 43.4% of UIS patients had nonlateralized ictal EEG (p < 0.001). CONCLUSION: The authors conclude that the accuracy of ictal SPECT is worse for MTLE patients with BIS than for those with UIS. The role of ictal SPECT in presurgical evaluation of patients with BIS must be reviewed.  相似文献   

3.
PURPOSE: In spite of unequivocal results of the presurgical evaluation, between 10 and 30% of patients with medial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE) do not become seizure free by temporal lobe surgery. Because event-related potentials (ERPs) recorded within the hippocampal formation have been shown to be sensitive to the epileptogenic process, we examined whether ERPs can help to improve the prediction of postoperative seizure control. METHODS: We recorded ERPs to words from bilateral intrahippocaampal electrodes by using a visual word-recognition paradigm in 70 patients with unilateral hippocampal pathology and related these measurements to seizure outcome after temporal lobe surgery. RESULTS: Words elicited N400 potentials, which were reduced in amplitude on repetition on the side contralateral to hippocampal sclerosis. This contralateral repetition effect, however, was significantly diminished in the group of patients who experienced seizure recurrence after the operation. Contralateral repetition effects thus permitted correct prediction of postoperative seizure control in 94% of all patients. CONCLUSIONS: Recording ERPs to words within the medial temporal lobes can improve the prediction of postoperative seizure control. Reduced repetition effects contralateral to the side of hippocampal sclerosis may indicate bilateral epileptogenicity.  相似文献   

4.
We report a detailed electroclinical analysis of 320 seizures recorded by foramen ovale electrodes in 77 potential candidates for selective temporal lobe surgery because of antiepileptic drug-resistant seizures. The exact localization of the origin of seizure discharges, the electroencephalographic (EEG) seizure onset patterns, transhemispheric propagation, propagation time, duration of discharge, laterality of discharge termination, postictal focal slowing, correspondence between foramen ovale recordings and the scalp EEG, and the influence of antiepileptic drug modifications were studied and correlated with the clinical seizure semiology and with postoperative outcome following selective amygdalohippocampectomy. In general, the foramen ovale electrode technique provided good neurophysiological information in candidates for selective amygdalohippocampectomy. The following ictal signs predicted a good surgical outcome: (a) unilateral and anterior mediobasal temporal lobe seizure onset, (b) short seizure duration, (c) no or infrequent contralateral seizure discharge propagation, and (d) if propagation to the contralateral mediobasal temporal lobe occurred, the postoperative outcome was better the later the contralateral mediobasal temporal lobe was affected. Postoperative outcome was also better the less frequently contralateral interictal spikes occurred. No direct predictive value could be attributed to the presence of an initial arrest reaction.  相似文献   

5.
PURPOSE: To investigate the factors which influence the persistence of interictal epileptiform discharges (IED) after epilepsy surgery. METHODS: In this retrospective study we included patients with intractable medial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE) who underwent presurgical evaluation including high-resolution MRI and video-EEG monitoring with seizure registration prior to an anterior temporal lobe resection. The postsurgical outcome was assessed by our team 6 months and 2 years after the surgery. RESULTS: One hundred and forty-seven patients fulfilled the inclusion criteria. The mean age of the patients was 31.8 (range 16-59 years). In 22 patients (15%) interictal epileptiform discharges were present on the postoperative routine EEG. We found that both the preoperative spike frequency ( P < 0.001 ) and postoperative seizures ( P = 0.04 ) were independently associated with the presence of IED on the postoperative routine EEG. The preoperative spike frequency was not associated with the postoperative outcome. The extent of resection showed no influence on the presence of postoperative IED. CONCLUSION: We hypothesize that two factors independently influence the presence of postoperative spikes: chronic interictal disturbance (represented as preoperative spike frequency) and the acute (postoperative) seizures. Our study confirmed that persistent postoperative IED had a prognostic value regarding the outcome of the epilepsy surgery.  相似文献   

6.
PURPOSE: To analyze the spatio-temporal relationship between seizure propagation and interictal epileptiform discharges (IEDs) in patients with bitemporal epilepsy. METHODS: We investigated 18 adult patients with intractable temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) who had undergone continuous video-EEG monitoring during presurgical evaluation. Only those patients were selected who had independent IEDs over both temporal lobes. Two authors evaluated the ictal and interictal EEG data independently. RESULTS: We analyzed 52 lateralized seizures of 18 patients. Thirty-one seizures showed ipsilateral seizure spread exclusively, whereas in 21 seizures the contralateral hemisphere was also involved. In lateralized seizures without contralateral propagation, we found that spikes ipsilateral to the seizure onset occurred postictally in a greater ratio than preictally (P<0.001). In lateralized seizures with contralateral propagation, we found no significant changes in the postictal spike distribution. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings showed that the lateralization of IEDs may depend on the brain areas involved by the preceding seizures, suggesting that spikes can be influenced by the seizure activity, and are not independent signs of epileptogenicity.  相似文献   

7.
Significance of Simple Partial Seizures in Temporal Lobe Epilepsy   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Summary: We determined how localization of simple partial seizures (SPS) correlated with localization of complex partial seizure (CPS) in scalp/sphenoidal EEG and assessed prognosis after temporal lobe resective surgery in patients with an ictal correlate of SPS in scalp/sphenoidal EEG recordings. EEGs were recorded with the 10–20 system of electrode placement and supplemented with sphenoidal electrodes. Between 1985 and 1992, 183 patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) reported an aura (SPS) during inpatient monitoring; all were eligible for inclusion in our study. The EEGs during SPS showed ictal changes in 51 patients (28%, 117 SPS). Forty-four patients had unilateral temporal interictal spikes (IIS), and SPS and CPS always arose from the same region. Seven patients had bitemporal interictal spikes; SPS colocalized with CPS in 4 patients (57%), SPS were contralateral to CPS in 2 patients, and 1 patient had bilateral independent CPS but unilateral SPS. SPS accompanied by EEG ictal changes conveyed a favorable prognosis in patients who underwent epilepsy surgery. Scalp/sphenoidal recorded IIS but were less reliable in identifying the location of CPS onset in patients with bitemporal spikes.  相似文献   

8.
OBJECTIVE: To characterize the clinical, EEG, MRI, and histopathologic features and explore seizure outcome in pediatric candidates for epilepsy surgery who have temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) caused by hippocampal sclerosis (HS). METHODS: The authors studied 17 children (4 to 12 years of age) and 17 adolescents (13 to 20 years of age) who had anteromesial temporal resection between 1990 and 1998. RESULTS: All patients had seizures characterized by decreased awareness and responsiveness. Automatisms were typically mild to moderate in children and moderate to marked in adolescents. Among adolescents, interictal spikes were almost exclusively unilateral anterior temporal, as opposed to children in whom anterior temporal spikes were associated with mid/posterior temporal, bilateral temporal, extratemporal, or generalized spikes in 60% of cases. MRI showed hippocampal sclerosis on the side of EEG seizure onset in all patients. Fifty-four percent of children and 56% of adolescents had significant asymmetry of total hippocampal volumes, whereas the remaining patients had only focal atrophy of the hippocampal head or body. Subtle MRI abnormalities of ipsilateral temporal neocortex were seen in all children and 60% of adolescents studied with FLAIR images. On histopathology, there was an unexpectedly high frequency of dual pathology with mild to moderate cortical dysplasia as well as HS, seen in 79% of children and adolescents. Seventy-eight percent of patients were free of seizures at follow-up (mean, 2.6 years). A tendency for lower seizure-free outcome was observed in patients with bilateral temporal interictal sharp waves or bilateral HS on MRI. The presence of dual pathology did not portend poor postsurgical outcome. CONCLUSIONS: TLE caused by HS similar to those in adults were seen in children as young as 4 years of age. Focal hippocampal atrophy seen on MRI often was not reflected in total hippocampal volumetry. Children may have an especially high frequency of dual pathology, with mild to moderate cortical dysplasia as well as HS, and MRI usually, but not always, predicts this finding. Postsurgical seizure outcome is similar to that in adult series.  相似文献   

9.
The purpose of this study was to quantify the temporal evolution and to determine the prognostic significance of spikes on serial postoperative EEGs after selective amygdala-hippocampectomy. The authors performed postoperative EEGs 4 months, 1 year, and 2 years after surgery in 31 patients with unilateral mesial temporal lobe epilepsy. Spike frequency was determined ipsilateral to the resection (group I, no spikes; group II, 1 to 10 spikes; group III, 11 to 20 spikes; group IV, more than 21 spikes during the 30-minute recording). The temporal evolution of postoperative spike frequency was assessed, and these parameters were correlated with surgical outcome. Twenty-two patients showed spikes on postoperative EEG. Spike frequency decreased over time in 14 patients, while no changes or minimal changes occurred in seven patients, and spike frequency increased in one patient. Nine patients had no spikes. There was no correlation between occurrence, frequency, and temporal evolution of spikes with postoperative seizure control. The authors' results demonstrate a progressive decrease of spike frequency during the postoperative period after selective amygdala-hippocampectomy, although occurrence, frequency, and temporal evolution of postoperative spikes had no implications on surgical outcome.  相似文献   

10.
OBJECTIVE: Bilateral hippocampal abnormality is frequent in mesial temporal lobe sclerosis and might affect outcome in epilepsy surgery. The objective of this study was to compare the lateralization of interictal and ictal scalp EEG with MRI T2 relaxometry. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Forty-nine consecutive patients with intractable mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE) were studied with scalp EEG/video monitoring and MRI T2 relaxometry. RESULTS: Bilateral prolongation of hippocampal T2 time was significantly associated with following bitemporal scalp EEG changes: (i) in ictal EEG left and right temporal EEG seizure onsets in different seizures, or, after regionalized EEG onset, evolution of an independent ictal EEG over the contralateral temporal lobe (left and right temporal asynchronous frequencies or lateralization switch; P = 0.002); (ii) in interictal EEG both left and right temporal interictal slowing (P = 0.007). Bitemporal T2 changes were not, however, associated with bitemporal interictal epileptiform discharges (IED). Lateralization of bilateral asymmetric or unilateral abnormal T2 findings were associated with initial regionalization of the ictal EEG in all but one patient (P < 0.005), with lateralization of IED in all patients (P < 0.005), and with scalp EEG slowing in 28 (82,4%) of 34 patients (P = 0.007). CONCLUSION: Our data suggest that EEG seizure propagation is more closely related to hippocampal T2 abnormalities than IED. Interictal and ictal scalp EEG, including the recognition of ictal propagation patterns, and MRI T2 relaxometry can help to identify patients with bitemporal damage in MTLE. Further studies are needed to estimate the impact of bilateral EEG and MRI abnormal findings on the surgical outcome.  相似文献   

11.
We reviewed data from 48 patients after anterior temporal lobe resection for medically intractable epilepsy. All had ictal electro-encephalographic (EEG) evidence of unilateral temporal lobe onset. Depth electrodes were used in 19 patients. Successful surgical outcome correlated significantly with factors that suggested a temporal lobe focus, particularly in the interictal scalp EEG. The most successful outcome occurred in patients with well-localized unilateral interictal temporal spikes (100% improved). The group with well-localized bilateral temporal spikes also did well (76% improved). Patients with extratemporal spread of the interictal spike on scalp EEG, either unilaterally or bilaterally, did less well. Only one third improved, despite extensive extracranial and intracranial monitoring, when indicated. The interictal scalp EEG may be the only EEG necessary for the presurgical evaluation of selected patients with intractable temporal lobe epilepsy.  相似文献   

12.
PURPOSE: To determine the characteristics and the clinical significance of focal slow activity and its association with focal epileptogenesis in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE). METHODS: We analyzed the interictal EEGs of 141 patients who had temporal lobe resections for intractable focal seizures and correlated the findings with pathologic changes and outcome. The pathologic changes were categorized into medial temporal sclerosis, tumors, and nonspecific changes. RESULTS: Lateralized slow activity was found in 66% of the patients, and it was mainly temporal, of delta frequency and irregular morphology. None of its characteristics, including quantity and reactivity to eye opening, was substrate specific. It was highly concordant with temporal spiking (60%), without any difference across the three groups, but provided additional information in 19 (15%) patients who had no lateralizing spikes. The effect of sleep also was similar in all three groups and included transition of slow waves into spikes. Lateralized slow activity to the side of the operation was significantly associated with favorable outcome only in the group with nonspecific pathology (p = 0.008), regardless of the presence, laterality, or topography of spikes. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that in patients with TLE whose brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is either normal or suggestive of medial temporal sclerosis, interictal temporal slow activity has a lateralizing value similar to that of temporal spiking. Its association with a favorable outcome in patients with nonspecific pathology also suggests that candidates with lateralizing temporal delta and normal MRI should not be barred from further preoperative assessment.  相似文献   

13.
PURPOSE: Simultaneous EEG and functional MRI (fMRI) allows measuring metabolic changes related to interictal spikes. Our objective was to investigate blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) responses to temporal lobe (TL) spikes by using EEG-fMRI recording. METHODS: We studied 35 patients who had a diagnosis of temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) and active TL spiking on routine scalp EEG recording. Two-hour sessions of continuous EEG-fMRI were recorded, and spikes were identified after offline artifact removal and used as events in the fMRI analysis. Each type of spike was analyzed separately, as one EEG-fMRI study. We determined significant (p < 0.05) positive (activation) and negative (deactivation) BOLD responses for each study. RESULTS: Twenty-seven patients had spikes during scanning (19 unilateral and eight bilateral). From a total of 35 fMRI studies, 29 (83%) showed BOLD responses: 14 had both activations and deactivations; 12, activations only; and three, deactivations only. Six (17%) showed no responses. Nineteen studies had mainly neocortical TL activation: Sixteen (84%) of 19 concordant with spikes, 12 of 16 with concomitant activation of the contralateral TL, and 16 of 19 with additional extratemporal activation; few showed exclusively mesial TL activation. Seventeen studies showed deactivation, either extratemporal plus temporal (n = 8) or exclusively extratemporal (n = 9). CONCLUSIONS: BOLD responses to TL spikes occurred in 83% of studies, predominated in the spiking temporal lobe, and manifested as activation or deactivation. Responses often involved the contralateral homologous cortex at the time of unilateral spikes and were frequently observed in extratemporal regions, suggesting that TL epileptic spikes can affect neuronal activity at a distance through synaptic connections.  相似文献   

14.
Epileptic seizures can initiate a neural circuit and lead to aberrant neural communication with brain areas outside the epileptogenic region. We focus on interictal activity in focal temporal lobe epilepsy and evaluate functional connectivity (FC) differences that emerge as function of bilateral versus strictly unilateral epileptiform activity. We assess the strength of FC at rest between the ictal and non‐ictal temporal lobes, in addition to whole brain connectivity with the ictal temporal lobe. Results revealed strong connectivity between the temporal lobes for both patient groups, but this did not vary as a function of unilateral versus bilateral interictal status. Both the left and right unilateral temporal lobe groups showed significant anti‐correlated activity in regions outside the epileptogenic temporal lobe, primarily involving the contralateral (non‐ictal/non‐pathologic) hemisphere, with precuneus involvement prominent. The bilateral groups did not show this contralateral anti‐correlated activity. This anti‐correlated connectivity may represent a form of protective and adaptive inhibition, helping to constrain epileptiform activity to the pathologic temporal lobe. The absence of this activity in the bilateral groups may be indicative of flawed inhibitory mechanisms, helping to explain their more widespread epileptiform activity. Our data suggest that the location and build up of epilepsy networks in the brain are not truly random, and are not limited to the formation of strictly epileptogenic networks. Functional networks may develop to take advantage of the regulatory function of structures such as the precuneus to instantiate an anti‐correlated network, generating protective cortico–cortico inhibition for the purpose of limiting seizure spread or epileptogenesis. Hum Brain Mapp 35:353–366, 2014. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

15.
PURPOSE: Very little reliable information is available regarding the role of anterior temporal lobectomy (ATL), optimal presurgical evaluation strategy, post-ATL seizure outcome, and the factors that predict the outcome in patients with medically refractory temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) and normal high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). To be cost-effective, epilepsy surgery centers in developing countries will have to select candidates for epilepsy surgery by using the locally available technology and expertise. METHODS: We reviewed the electroclinical and pathological characteristics and seizure outcome of 17 patients who underwent ATL for medically refractory TLE after being selected for ATL based on a noninvasive selection protocol without the aid of positron emission tomography (PET) or single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), despite a normal preoperative high-resolution MRI. RESULTS: Seven (41%) patients achieved an excellent seizure outcome; five of them were totally seizure free. An additional five (29%) patients had >75% reduction in seizure frequency. The following pre-ATL factors predicted an excellent outcome: antecedent history of febrile seizures, strictly unilateral anterior temporal interictal epileptiform discharges (IEDs), and concordant type 1 ictal EEG pattern. All the five patients with pathologically verified hippocampal formation neuronal loss were seizure free. The presence of posterior temporal, bilateral temporal, and generalized IEDs portended unfavorable post-ATL seizure outcome. CONCLUSIONS: A subgroup of patients destined to have an excellent post-ATL outcome can be selected from MRI-negative TLE patients by using history and scalp-recorded interictal and ictal EEG data. The attributes of these patients are antecedent history of febrile seizures, strictly unilateral anterior IEDs, and concordant type 1 ictal EEG pattern.  相似文献   

16.
Nine patients who underwent presurgical evaluation because of medically refractory temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) showed either unilateral, although alternating in side, or bilateral simultaneous seizure onsets in both temporal lobes (TL). EEG recordings with semi-invasive foramen ovale electrodes revealed in seven patients a predominance of seizure onset in one TL of between 50% and 88%. In two patients the majority of seizures originated simultaneously in both TL. In four patients a unilateral selective amygdalohippocampectomy resulted in a good to excellent seizure outcome without noteworthy memory deficits and confirmed the preoperative lateralization of the primary epileptogenic focus by interictal 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (PET). Five patients were rejected from surgery due to strong bilaterality of their epilepsy and/or divergent presurgical findings. PET contributed to the decision of whether surgery should be performed: all patients who underwent surgery had a unilateral TL hypometabolism which was concordant with the findings of other tests. Patients in whom surgery was denied had either bilateral temporal hypometabolism or the PET findings were discordant with other results obtained during the presurgical evaluation.  相似文献   

17.
Typical (TPP) and atypical (APP) perfusion patterns (PP) may be seen in ictal SPECT of patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE). APP may pose problem in the lateralization of the epileptogenic zone (EZ). We aimed to investigate predictive variables for the occurrence of TPP and APP. Fifty-one TLE patients were submitted to successful anterior-mesial temporal lobectomy. Univariate (UVA) and multivariate (MVA) analysis were performed upon clinical data, distribution of interictal spikes, and ictal chronology of seizures. From MVA, a final predictive model (FPM) was determined to better predict TPP and APP. Forty patients showed TPP (78.5%) and 11 patients APP (21.5%). Accuracy of ictal SPECT was higher in the unilateral (UIS) than in the bilateral (BIS) interictal spikes group (P = 0.05). FPM showed that patients exhibiting BIS, with shorter proportion of the electrographic seizure occurring after completion of tracer injection, and longer clinical than EEG seizure duration had more APP (P = 0.003). Generalized tonic-clonic seizures did not result in more APP. We concluded that analysis of ictal SPECT in TLE requires the knowledge of TPP and APP, the distribution of interictal spikes on temporal lobes and the ictal chronology of seizures. BIS showed that beyond a more complex epileptogenicity and seizure propagation, they may also lead to APP.  相似文献   

18.

Purpose

Previous small studies have demonstrated that seizure outcomes following surgery for extratemporal lobe epilepsy (ETLE) in children are worse than those for temporal lobe epilepsy. We have conducted a meta-analysis of the available literature to better understand ETLE surgical outcomes in children.

Methods

We searched PubMed (1990–2009) for appropriate studies using the following terms: ETLE, ETLE surgery, ETLE surgery outcome, frontal lobe epilepsy, occipital lobe epilepsy, and parietal lobe epilepsy. Our collected data included patient age at seizure onset and surgery, the cerebral lobe involved with epileptogenesis, MRI findings, predominant seizure semiology, intracranial monitoring use (electrode implantation), epileptic region histopathology, and postoperative seizure outcome. Statistical analysis was performed to determine associations among these variables and postoperative outcome.

Results

Ninety-five patients from 17 studies satisfied the inclusion criteria. Pathological findings (p?=?0.039) and seizure type (p?=?0.025) were significantly associated with outcome: A larger proportion of patients with cortical dysplasia and complex partial seizures experienced better outcomes. Age at surgery (p?=?0.073) and the cerebral resection site (p?=?0.059) were marginally associated with seizure outcome.

Conclusions

This study confirms previous reports: Surgical outcomes for ETLE epilepsy are significantly worse than those for temporal lobe epilepsy. The reasons for this difference may include the diffuse nature of the pathology involved in ETLE, difficulty in localizing the seizure focus in young children, and involvement of “eloquent” nonresectable cortex in epileptogenesis. Because of the reporting variability among different epilepsy centers, more uniform protocols are necessary for fair evaluation and comparison of outcomes among the different centers.  相似文献   

19.
Purpose: Intracranial electroencephalography (EEG) monitoring is an important process in the presurgical evaluation for epilepsy surgery. The objective of this study was to identify the ideal resection margin in neocortical epilepsy guided by subdural electrodes. For this purpose, we investigated the relationship between the extent of resection guided by subdural electrodes and the outcome of epilepsy surgery. Methods: Intracranial EEG studies were analyzed in 177 consecutive patients who had undergone resective epilepsy surgery. We reviewed various intracranial EEG findings and resection extent. We analyzed the relationships between the surgical outcomes and intracranial EEG factors: the frequency, morphology, and distribution of ictal‐onset discharges, the propagation speed, and the time lag between clinical and intracranial ictal onset. We also investigated whether the extent of resection, including the area showing ictal rhythm and various interictal abnormalities—such as frequent interictal spikes, pathologic delta waves, and paroxysmal fast activity—influenced the surgical outcome. Results: Seventy‐five patients (42%) were seizure free. A seizure‐free outcome was significantly associated with a resection that included the area showing ictal spreading rhythm during the first 3 s or included all the electrodes showing pathologic delta waves or frequent interictal spikes. However, subgroup analysis revealed that the extent of resection did not affect the surgical outcome in lateral temporal lobe epilepsy. Conclusions: The extent of resection is closely associated with surgical outcome, especially in extratemporal lobe epilepsy. Resection that includes the area with total pathologic delta waves and frequent interictal spikes predicts a good surgical outcome.  相似文献   

20.
Erickson JC  Clapp LE  Ford G  Jabbari B 《Epilepsia》2006,47(1):202-206
PURPOSE: To determine the prevalence, manifestations, lateralizing value, and surgical prognostic value of somatosensory auras (SSAs) in patients with refractory temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE). METHODS: Eighty-one consecutive patients undergoing temporal lobectomy for refractory complex-partial seizures were screened for SSAs. The characteristics of the somatosensory phenomena, occurrence of other aura types, seizure semiology, findings of EEG and imaging studies, temporal lobe neuropathology, and postoperative seizure outcome were determined in each patient with SSAs. RESULTS: Nine (11%) of 81 patients with refractory temporal lobe seizures reported distinct SSAs as part of their habitual seizures. The most common manifestation of SSAs was tingling (eight of nine, 89%), but sensory loss (one of nine, 11%) and pain (one of nine, 11%) also were reported. Five patients had unilateral somatosensory symptoms, and four patients had bilateral somatosensory symptoms. Seizure origin was in the contralateral temporal lobe in four (80%) of five patients with unilateral SSAs, including all patients with unilateral SSAs affecting a limb. Partial temporal lobe resection produced complete seizure remission in all nine (100%) patients 1 year after surgery and in seven (78%) of nine patients 2 years after surgery. CONCLUSIONS: SSAs occur more frequently than previously appreciated in patients with refractory temporal lobe seizures and usually manifest as either unilateral or bilateral tingling. In patients with temporal lobe seizures, unilateral SSAs involving a limb suggest a seizure origin in the contralateral temporal lobe. The surgical outcome of TLE patients with SSAs is favorable. Thus the presence of SSAs should not serve as a deterrent to temporal lobe resection in patients with clearly defined TLE.  相似文献   

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