Usefulness of repeat review of head magnetic resonance images during presurgical epilepsy conferences

2016 
Abstract Surgical epilepsy conferences are an important part of the process of determining whether a patient is a candidate for resective epilepsy surgery. At these conferences, repeat review ( re-review ) of the magnetic resonance images (MRIs) of the patient's head often occurs. This study assessed how often radiologic re-review at a presurgical epilepsy conference resulted in a changed interpretation of the head MRI. Charts were reviewed for 239 patients who had been presented at presurgical epilepsy conferences between 2008 and 2012. Of the 233 patients whose MRIs were re-reviewed, resective surgery was performed in 94 patients (40.3%). Forty-one patients (17.6%) had a previously undiagnosed finding, and 18 of the 41 (43.9%) underwent resective surgery. For 4 of the 41 patients (9.8%) with a previously undiagnosed pertinent finding, re-review detected abnormalities that were not amenable to surgical resection (autoimmunity or significant bilateral pathology).
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