This study assesses the interest of a simple fMRI rhyme detection paradigm to determine hemispheric predominance for language in epileptic patients. Nineteen patients were examined. The findings derived from the fMRI examinations were compared with those obtained on the same patients using the Wada test, stereotactic intracerebral EEG stimulations and recordings, and/or video-EEG recordings.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: The aim of this study was to correlate the electroclinical and radiologic data with the neuropathologic findings and surgical outcome in epileptic patients with epilepsy and Taylor's focal cortical dysplasia (TFCD) and to characterize further the abnormal intermediate filaments expression in the balloon cell present in the peculiar dysplasia.
Methods: We retrospectively selected 13 TFCD patients who underwent surgery for intractable epilepsy with the aim of removing the magnetic resonance (MR)-detectable lesion and/or the epileptogenic zone defined by stereoelectroencephalographic recordings. The surgical specimens were analyzed by means of routine neuropathologic and immunocytochemical studies.
Purpose: To evaluate lesions of the different structures of the Papez circuit in association with hippocampal sclerosis.
Material: and methods. 13 patients (32.
Body rotation during partial epileptic seizures remains a poorly understood clinical feature, possibly related to the ictal involvement of specific cortical areas (e.g. vestibular cortex).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNineteen families with autosomal dominant partial epilepsy were analysed clinically and electrophysiologically in detail. Seventy-one patients were studied as well as 33 non-epileptic at-risk family members. We subdivided the families into those with autosomal dominant nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy (ADNFLE) (n = 8), familial temporal lobe epilepsy (n = 7) and autosomal dominant partial epilepsy with variable foci (n = 4).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChronic high frequency (130 Hz) stimulation (HFS) of the thalamic target Vim has replaced thalamotomy as a treatment of tremor of various origins and was extended to two other targets (Subthalamic nucleus (STN) and the medial pallidus (GPi)), since 1993 based on recent experimental data in rats and monkeys. STN appears to be a target of major interest, able to control the three cardinal symptoms and to allow the decrease or suppression of levodopa treatment, which then suppresses also levodopa induced dyskinesias. The mechanisms of action of HFS are not fully understood, but are definitely related to high frequency and are probably different depending on the target.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPartial epileptic seizures are known to cause a focal increase in cerebral blood flow (CBF). However, quantified studies of ictal CBF changes under intracranial EEG control are still needed to assess the relationships in time and space between CBF changes and electrical discharges. Ten patients undergoing an intracerebral stereotaxic EEG (stereo-EEG) investigation for epilepsy surgery were prospectively studied for local perfusion changes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFConverging evidence suggests that partial epileptic seizures can cause a circumscribed increase of CBF. However, quantified studies of ictal perfusion changes verified by intracranial EEG are still needed to better evaluate the relationships between CBF changes and the underlying electrical activity. We studied, in 10 patients undergoing a SEEG for epilepsy surgery, the local perfusion changes measured by [15O]-H2O PET during focal epileptic discharges induced by intracerebral electrical stimulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe reviewed 41 studies on epilepsy surgery in 1645 children and adolescents. The available data vary greatly from one paper to another, particularly as regards the age of the patients included, selection criteria, presurgical methodology, and the type of surgical intervention. Moreover, the surgical results are classified according to very different criteria.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLittle is known about bradycardia and cardiac asystole which occur during partial epileptic seizures, especially whether they relate to ictal involvement of well-defined cortical areas. Several reports based on simultaneous electrocardiographic and intracranial depth electroencephalographic monitoring have shown that either the fronto-orbital cortex or the amygdalohippocampal complex could be responsible for such cardiac variations. We performed stereo-EEG recordings in a patient with refractory localization-related epilepsy associated with a hypothalamic hamartoma.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe assessed the clinical utility of [11C]flumazenil-PET (FMZ-PET) prospectively in 100 epileptic patients undergoing a pre-surgical evaluation, and defined the specific contribution of this neuro-imaging technique with respect to those of MRI and [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose-PET (FDG-PET). All patients benefited from a long term video-EEG monitoring, whereas an intracranial EEG investigation was performed in 40 cases. Most of our patients (73%) demonstrated a FMZ-PET abnormality; this hit rate was significantly higher in temporal lobe epilepsy (94%) than in other types of epilepsy (50%) (P < 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this report we describe three patients with developmental cortical abnormalities (generally referred as cortical dysplasia), revealed by MRI and operated on for intractable epilepsy. Tissue, removed for strictly therapeutic reasons, was defined as the epileptogenic area by electroclinical data and stereo EEG (SEEG) recordings. Tissue samples were processed initially for histology, and selected sections were further processed for immunocytochemical investigation in order to determine whether the region of cortical dysplasia was co-extensive with the epileptogenic area.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe aim of this study was to evaluate, in 16 patients with drug-resistant partial epilepsy who were waiting to undergo surgical treatment, the relation between positron emission tomography (PET) findings with fluorine-18 fluorodeoxyglucose ([18F]FDG) in the interictal state and the different stereo-electroencephalography (SEEG) patterns that characterize: (a) the epileptogenic zone (low-voltage fast-activity discharge before or concurrent with ictal clinical symptoms), (b) the irritative zone (spikes, spikes and waves, isolated or grouped in short bursts) and (c) the lesional zone (continuous, sometimes polyrhythmic slow waves or continuous delta waves or very important voltage depression). SEEG was performed following an individually defined electrode implantation strategy. Whereas at least one area of hypometabolism was detected by visual interpretation of PET/[18F]FDG images in all the subjects in the study, there was poor agreement between PET/[18F]FDG quantitative measures of regional metabolism and SEEG findings.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe analyse clinical characteristics, presurgical investigations, surgical procedures and outcome of 137 patients operated-on for a drug-resistant partial epilepsy, in Grenoble from January 1990 to December 1993. Moreover we present data of 63 patients suffering from a "pure" temporal lobe epilepsy selected using the following criteria: 1. surgery limited to temporal lobe structures 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe analyse EEG data from video-EEG recordings of 24 patients, selected among the 63 with "pure" temporal lobe epilepsy. As to interictal EEG features, 62.5% of patients show a less regular background activity on the affected side, in 70% of patients slow waves are either localised or lobar, while in 58% are spikes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElectroencephalogr Clin Neurophysiol
September 1995
Patients having a hypothalamic hamartoma frequently present epileptic attacks of laughter, and they later experience multiple additional seizure types, which invariably lead to a severe drug-resistant epilepsy. If this association is now well-known, relationships between the hypothalamic mass and the different types of seizures remain still mysterious. We report the case of a 16-year-old girl suffering from this peculiar epileptic picture, in whom a stereo-EEG study was performed, allowing us to record both the hamartoma, the neighboring hypothalamic structures, and other bilateral cortical areas.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElectroencephalogr Clin Neurophysiol
April 1994
Magnetic resonance imaging allows the identification of heterotopic gray matter (HGM) in medically intractable partial epilepsies. The relationships between HGM and the epileptogenic zone remain, however, unclear. In a case of a temporo-parietal epilepsy studied by stereo-EEG, interictal and ictal electrical activity of a temporal HGM were recorded, showing: (1) an intralesional electrical activity, (2) the possible presence of asynchronous spikes, and (3) an early but never initial, or isolated, involvement during ictal discharges.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSince January 1990, 70 patients with medically intractable partial epilepsy underwent a stereo-EEG investigation in our center. We first described technical requirements, and gave an overview of the variety of the explored cerebral regions and implantation patterns realized, pointing out the low rate of morbidity (1.4%).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn patients with severe drug-resistant partial epilepsy, undergoing Stereo-EEG investigations, spatial definition of the "epileptogenic area" is mainly based on spontaneous seizures recordings, but also on seizures induced by intracerebral electrical stimulation (ES). Only "trains" ES (TES, 50 pps) are currently used with this aim; "shocks" ES (SES, 1 pps) are principally applied to localize motor pathways. We have shown, during a prospective study concerning 10 temporal lobe epileptic patients, that SES could frequently induce seizures, especially when stimulation is applied in the anterior part of the Ammon's horn.
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