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Query: UMLS:C0014547 (
focal epilepsy
)
1,627
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In order to localize epileptogenic electrophysiological sources, a multichannel MEG system was used in 3 patients with partial epilepsy during presurgical evaluation. MEG and EEG (including scalp, sphenoidal and intracranial foramen ovale electrodes) were recorded simultaneously during a period of intensive video-EEG monitoring in order to observe single spontaneous spikes. In addition to
MRI
, SPECT and PET investigations were performed. Electrical activity subsequent to the activity of the epileptic focus could be localized by the MEG after noise reduction using a temporal correlation technique. Simultaneous registration of the magnetic field and the electrical field showed that the source of the primary focal epileptic activity (first period during the total spike wave complex where a dipolar magnetic field pattern is found) is localized in neocortical lateral regions, whereas another focal epileptic activity in a later phase of propagation occurs in temporal mesial regions. In 1 patient (case 1) the primary focal epileptic activity was localized in the surrounding neocortical tissue of an angioma and the middle and inferior temporal gyrus. The second phase of propagation is localized in temporo-basal-mesial regions, including para- and hippocampal structures. The latest center of activity occurred in posterior parts of the gyrus cinguli. In 2 other patients, the primary focal epileptogenic activity was localized at the insula and also spread into temporal basal mesial regions. A multi-modal approach to research of
focal epilepsy
, combining metabolic, electrical potential, magnetoencephalographic and morphological data, recorded by non-invasive techniques, offers new perspectives for the detection of involved brain regions. The 3-D and time-resolved localization of focal epileptic activity, correlated with the individual anatomy of the human brain, may improve the determination of neuronal populations involved in the individual epileptogenic process, especially in the interaction between temporal or extratemporal neocortex and limbic system.
...
PMID:The neocortico to mesio-basal limbic propagation of focal epileptic activity during the spike-wave complex. 171 45
The Gamma Knife is currently the only radiosurgical device which has been used in functional neurosurgery. This mode of utilization is possible because the instrument can make lesions in normal brains with a volume as small as 50 mm3. The experience of functional radiosurgery accumulated at the Karolinska Institute over 21 years is reviewed, and the possible implications of the new developments in imaging techniques for the future of functional radiosurgery are considered. The review covers gamma thalamotomy for pain and tremor, radiosurgery for trigeminal neuralgia, gamma capsulotomy for severe anxiety and obsessive-compulsive neurosis, and Gamma Knife surgery for
focal epilepsy
. The important role of stereotactic
MRI
localization in functional radiosurgery is pointed out, and a preliminary report of the recent experience with stereotactic magnetoencephalography combined with stereotactic
MRI
for physiological and anatomic target localization is given. It is concluded that functional radiosurgery should only be performed with radiation of very small volumes of brain, as the very high doses required would be devastating if delivered to even small volumes.
...
PMID:Functional neurosurgery--a future for the gamma knife? 172 60
Cerebral single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), a method of functional brain imaging, measures cerebral blood flow and metabolism. This paper describes the imaging procedure and several cases where cerebral SPECT was of use in the differential diagnosis of medically ill patients who also presented with psychopathology. SPECT patterns in cerebrovascular disease, dementia,
focal epilepsy
, and AIDS are at present the best described and seem to be the most specific. Often changes in regional cerebral blood flow are seen before structural changes become apparent on CT or
MRI
. Cerebral SPECT can add valuable diagnostic information in assessing psychopathology in the medically ill and can often lead to changes in treatment.
...
PMID:The role of SPECT brain imaging in assessing psychopathology in the medically ill. 174 99
One hundred patients suffering from
focal epilepsy
with complex partial seizures refractory to medical treatment and showing no abnormality at CT were explored by
MRI
with an 0.5 Tesla magnet.
MRI
detected an abnormality in 25 patients with, in 17 of them, good correlation between
MRI
and clinical as well as electroencephalographic findings. Abnormal morphology and signal was found in 5 patients, with positive CT results on reexamination of previous CT images or on new CT scans in 4 of them. There was a diffuse temporal lobe high-intensity signal in 3 cases and a localized high-intensity signal in 9 cases (temporal lobe 4, occipital lobe 3, frontal lobe 1, fronto-parietal and parietal lobes 1). Thus, in 13% of the cases
MRI
demonstrated a lesion that had not been detected at CT, and the location of the lesion was concordant with clinical and electroencephalographic data.
...
PMID:Magnetic resonance imaging in refractory focal epilepsy with normal CT scans. 251 40
A case of late onset
focal epilepsy
in a mentally and neurologically normal girl in which the
MRI
showed a focal heterotopia is presented. The efficacy of this new procedure in detecting migratory disorders is discussed and the scanty literature reviewed. This case suggests that in the future more cases of epilepsy previously classified as "cryptogenetic" will be demonstrated as secondary to developmental abnormalities.
...
PMID:[Finding of focal heterotopy with magnetic resonance. Description of a case associated with late onset epilepsy]. 271 92
Clinical improvement in epilepsy following temporal lobectomy is more often obtained when an abnormality is found on subsequent histological examination. Pre-operative
MRI
demonstrated an abnormal signal in the temporal lobe of a patient with pathologically proven mesial temporal sclerosis with microvascular anomaly.
MRI
may therefore be helpful in the selection of patients for temporal lobectomy.
MRI
findings of 12 patients with resistant
focal epilepsy
are reviewed. A wide range of T1 and T2 weighting is suggested to maximise selection of patients.
...
PMID:Magnetic resonance imaging in the management of resistant focal epilepsy: pathological case report and experience of 12 cases. 312 96
Brain single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) was performed in 16 patients with
focal epilepsy
, as well as EEG, using 99m Tc-HM-PAO SPECT and a rotating gamma camera system. Pathological Tc-HM-PAO SPECT findings were registered in 75%. CT was positive in 25%.
MRI
was positive in 76%. The results of Tc-HM-PAO SPECT findings were compared with those of CT and
MRI
. 61% of the
MRI
findings correlated with the pathological SPECT findings with respect to the side of the hemisphere, and in 75% of the patients the focal EEG abnormality and the pathological Tc-HM-PAO-SPECT findings were localized in the same hemisphere.
...
PMID:Initial experience with 99m Tc-hexamethyl-propylene amine oxime (HM-PAO) single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) in patients with focal epilepsy. 314 47
When a
focal epilepsy
proves refractory to medical therapy, surgical treatment is available and increasingly used. Most interventions consist of focal cortical resections, and by far the most common operation is a temporal lobectomy. The presurgical evaluation is complex and multidisciplinary. It includes clinical evaluation, EEG-video monitoring, neuropsychological testing, and structural as well as functional imaging. When surface EEG fails to identify the epileptogenic zone with sufficient confidence, several invasive methods are available, each with its advantages and limitations. In addition to neurophysiologic data, when there is convergence of structural imaging (
MRI
) and functional testing (Wada test, neuropsychological evaluation, nuclear imaging), a single focus can be identified, and a focal resection is likely to be successful. Surgery is a well-accepted and effective therapeutic modality for patients with refractory epilepsy. When surgical candidates are selected appropriately, results are excellent, especially for temporal lobe epilepsy.
...
PMID:Evaluation for surgical treatment of partial epilepsy: an overview. 757 98
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) with susceptibility-based contrast was used to detect focal changes in cerebral blood flow and metabolism in a patient with
focal epilepsy
. The patient presented with frequent partial motor seizures involving his right lower face that spread to produce speech arrest and occasionally right arm jerking. Consciousness was never impaired during these events. A multislice echoplanar technique was used to acquire 16 contiguous axial slices every 4 seconds for 11 minutes. Although no overt seizures were observed or reported by the patient during the scanning, a time series analysis of the functional data revealed focal signal-intensity changes in the posterior left frontal lobe, which correlated well both in duration and spatial localization with ictal activity subsequently recorded by invasive electrophysiological monitoring. The spatial localization of fMRI was more accurate than electroencephalography recorded from a subdural grid in predicting the site of successful surgical therapy. These results illustrate the potential of functional
MRI
for localizing seizure foci with high spatial and temporal resolution. Such studies can be readily combined with high-resolution anatomical imaging, task-activation studies, and other magnetic resonance techniques.
...
PMID:Localization of subclinical ictal activity by functional magnetic resonance imaging: correlation with invasive monitoring. 757 58
Recent advances in pediatric epileptology are the consequence of the explosive advance of medical technology in recent years. In this manuscript, some of the major highlights of these technology driven advances will be presented. Recognition of a typical EEG spike pattern leads to the identification of benign
focal epilepsy
of childhood, an extremely frequent electro-clinical syndrome of excellent prognosis. The development of CT scan and particularly of high resolution
MRI
, has led to the easy identification of a variety of pathologies which were previously recognized only by pathologists. These include, among others, neuroblast migrational disorders, mesial temporal sclerosis, forme fruste of tuberous sclerosis, and slow growing small temporal neoplasms. PET scanning has also shown to be particularly sensitive in the detection of subtle pathological lesions, which may remain undetected by
MRI
. This is particularly true in infants in whom the PET scan may uncover an unsuspected focal lesion in patients with hypsarrhythmia, indicating that hypsarrhythmia may be a form of a secondary generalized epilepsy. Advances in surgical techniques have also decreased significantly the risks of callosotomies and hemispherectomies, techniques that are now widely used to improve seizure control in patients with catastrophic seizure disorders. A better understanding of neurotransmitters involved in the generation or inhibition of seizures has led to the development of a variety of new drugs which promise to improve our ability to control seizures conservatively. Finally, advances in molecular biology have also had an impact on epileptology, leading to the discovery of gene abnormalities underlying a number of epileptic syndromes.
...
PMID:Recent advances in childhood epilepsy. 805 22
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