Ictal stereo-electroencephalography onset patterns of mesial temporal lobe epilepsy and their clinical implications
2020
Abstract Objective The differences in mesial temporal epilepsy (MTE) stereo-electroencephalography (SEEG) seizure-onset patterns and their clinical implications remains unclear. Methods We analyzed consecutive patients with MTE undergoing non-invasive workup, SEEG evaluation and resective surgery. Cases were classified into either mesial temporal sclerosis (MTS) group or non-MTS group based on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Seizure-onset patterns of SEEG were classified to analyze their correlation with surgical outcome and clinical subtypes. Results Twenty-eight patients were studied. Twenty (71.4%) patients had Engel I outcome. Thirteen patients had one seizure-onset pattern, 15 had two or more patterns. Five patterns of seizure-onset were identified and seizure-onset zones differed significantly across the 5 patterns. No difference was observed in surgical outcome between patients with single or multiple seizure-onset patterns. Periodic spike-onset pattern was associated with MTS (P=0.003) while burst-onset was associated with non-MTS lesions (P=0.003). Patients with seizure-onsets outside the resected temporal lobe (multiple onsets) had poorer prognosis (P=0.0046). Conclusion We identified 5 distinct onset patterns of MTE and correlated two of them with MRI findings. Multiple seizure-onset patterns in MTE may not necessarily suggest poor outcome. Patients with multi-focal seizure-onsets including seizures originating outside the resected temporal lobe have poorer outcome. Significance This study identifies distinct onset patterns of MTE and their clinical implications.
Keywords:
- Correction
- Source
- Cite
- Save
- Machine Reading By IdeaReader
22
References
2
Citations
NaN
KQI