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Towards a better identification of ictal semiology patterns in insular epilepsies: A stereo-EEG study. | LitMetric

Towards a better identification of ictal semiology patterns in insular epilepsies: A stereo-EEG study.

Clin Neurophysiol

Surgical Epileptology Unit, Neurosurgery Department, GHU Paris Psychiatry and Neurosciences, Sainte-Anne Hospital, France. Electronic address:

Published: November 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study aimed to classify and describe seizure symptoms in patients with insular epilepsy based on the structure of the insular cortex, using stereoelectroencephalography (SEEG) for analysis.
  • - Researchers examined 17 patients and divided the insular cortex into three regions: anterior, middle, and posterior, noting distinct seizure characteristics and awareness disruptions related to each area.
  • - The findings suggest that understanding the specific features of seizures based on insular regions can improve SEEG planning for better diagnosis and treatment of insular epilepsy.

Article Abstract

Objective: To describe pure insular ictal semiology and patterns of extra-insular spread demonstrated by stereoelectroencephalography (SEEG) according to a classification based on the insular cytoarchitecture.

Methods: We investigated the ictal semiology in 17 patients undergoing SEEG for insular epilepsy. The insular cortex was divided into three regions roughly overlapping with the agranular, dysgranular and granular regions. Ictal semiology was described accordingly: anterior insula (AI, short anterior and middle gyri), middle insula (MI, short posterior and long anterior gyri) and posterior insula (PI, long posterior gyrus).

Results: Awareness impairment occurred secondarily to extra-insular ictal spread. Subjective manifestations were constant. AI seizures (n = 3) presented with autonomic (increased heart rate [HR], respiratory changes), oropharyngeal (mainly throat sensations), emotional (fear, anguish) semiology and the "hand-to-throat" sign followed by frontal-like semiology. MI seizures (n = 8) presented with mainly non-painful paresthesia, some autonomic (respiratory, increased HR), oropharyngeal or thermic symptoms and early motor features with spread to the opercular cortex. PI seizures (n = 6) were characterized by somatosensory semiology, mainly paresthesia potentially painful, and cephalic sensations.

Conclusions: Cytoarchitectonic-based classification and the corresponding ictal features support the antero-posterior grading of insular seizures and highlight specific ictal symptoms.

Significance: This refinement of insular semiology can help optimize the planning of SEEG for presumed insular epilepsy.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.clinph.2023.08.007DOI Listing

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