• Neurology · Sep 2003

    Comparative Study

    Intracranial ictal onset zone in nonlesional lateral temporal lobe epilepsy on scalp ictal EEG.

    • S K Lee, C H Yun, J B Oh, H W Nam, S W Jung, J C Paeng, D S Lee, C K Chung, and G Choe.
    • Department of Neurology, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Korea. sangunlee@dreamwiz.com
    • Neurology. 2003 Sep 23;61(6):757-64.

    ObjectiveTo determine the ictal focus and the role of seizure characteristics, fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) PET, and subtraction ictal SPECT in patients diagnosed as having nonlesional lateral temporal lobe epilepsy by long-term scalp video-EEG monitoring.MethodsThe authors studied 33 consecutive patients with nonlesional neocortical epilepsy who had a scalp ictal onset zone localized in the temporal lobe and good surgical outcome after focal neocortical resection. All patients were evaluated using intracranial recordings prior to resection. Semiology, FDG-PET, and ictal-interictal subtraction SPECT were used to verify the diagnostic role of these methods in the localization of epileptic foci.ResultsThe ictal onset zones, confirmed by intracranial study, were the lateral temporal (22 patients), parietal (5), frontal (3), temporoparietal (2), and occipital (1) areas. FDG-PET analyzed by statistical parametric mapping correctly localized the epileptogenic lobe in 18 of 33 patients and subtraction ictal SPECT correctly localized it in 13 of 25 patients. However, in patients with extratemporal ictal onset zones, FDG-PET and ictal SPECT in combination correctly localized the epileptogenic lobe in only 3 of 11 cases.ConclusionsAn extratemporal ictal onset zone was encountered in patients with nonlesional lateral temporal lobe seizures based on scalp video-EEG monitoring. FDG-PET and subtraction SPECT had localizing value in no more than half of patients.

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