Epilepsia
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EEG recording during sleep is widely used in the assessment of epilepsy, particularly in candidates for surgery, yet the diagnostic value of this procedure is not well established. We evaluated the predictive reliability of interictal epileptiform discharges (IEDs) for localization in presurgical patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) during non-REM sleep. ⋯ Our results suggest that IEDs occurring in non-REM sleep provide more accurate information for lateralization of epileptogenesis than do those occurring during waking. This gain of diagnostic information was obtained in patients who showed either bilateral or no discharges in waking records, because unilateral discharges arising de novo in sleep were always correctly lateralizing. On the other hand, in patients who showed unilateral discharges in the awake state, whether ipsilateral or contralateral to the epileptogenic zone, the findings were generally unchanged during sleep.