Purpose: Gliomatosis cerebri (GC) is a rare neoplastic disorder that may present as intractable e... more Purpose: Gliomatosis cerebri (GC) is a rare neoplastic disorder that may present as intractable epilepsy during early life. We report our experience regarding the evaluation and the surgical treatment of epilepsy in this population.
Purpose: Prenatal and perinatal adverse events are reported to have a pathogenetic role in focal ... more Purpose: Prenatal and perinatal adverse events are reported to have a pathogenetic role in focal cortical dysplasia (FCD). However, no data are available regarding the prevalence and significance of this association. A cohort of children with significant prenatal and perinatal brain injury and histologically proven mild malformations of cortical development (mMCD) or FCD was analyzed. Methods: We retrospectively evaluated a surgical series of 200 patients with histologically confirmed mMCD/FCD. Combined historical and radiologic inclusion criteria were used to identify patients with prenatal and perinatal risk factors. Electroclinical, imaging, neuropsychological, surgical, histopathologic, and seizure outcome data were reviewed. Results: Prenatal and perinatal insults including severe prematurity, asphyxia, bleeding, hydrocephalus, and stroke occurred in 12.5% of children with mMCD/FCD (n = 25). Their epilepsy was characterized by early seizure onset, high seizure frequency, and absence of seizure control. Patients with significant prenatal and perinatal risk factors had more abnormal neurologic findings, lower intelligence quotient (IQ) scores, and slower background EEG activity than mMCD/FCD subjects without prenatal or perinatal brain injury. MRI evidence of cortical malformations was identified in 74% of patients. Most patients underwent large multilobar resections or hemispherectomies; 54% were seizure-free 2 years after surgery. Histologically ''milder'' forms of cortical malformations (mMCD and FCD type I) were observed most commonly in our series. Conclusions: Surgically remediable low-grade cortical malformations may occur in children with significant prenatally and perinatally acquired encephalopathies and play an important role in the pathogenesis of their epilepsy. Presurgical detection of dysplastic cortex has important practical consequences for surgical planning.
The aim of this study was to investigate the utility of three-dimensional electroencephalography ... more The aim of this study was to investigate the utility of three-dimensional electroencephalography source imaging (3D-ESI) with low-resolution electroencephalographic data in the pediatric noninvasive presurgical evaluation, and to compare the findings with positron emission tomography (PET) and ictal single-photon emission computed tomography (iSPECT). We retrospectively selected 60 patients from a database of 594 patients who underwent excisional surgery for drug-resistant epilepsy. Patients were <18 years at time of surgery, had at least one presurgical volumetric brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and at least 1 year of outcome data. 3D-ESI was performed with NeuroScan software CURRY V.7.0. For each patient the surgical resection was planned utilizing 3D-ESI as an adjunctive tool to supplement MRI and electrocorticographic data. Our analyses addressed three critical variables: pathology (focal cortical dysplasia vs. other pathologies), imaging (MRI negative vs. positive ca...
Epileptic disorders : international epilepsy journal with videotape, Jan 20, 2015
Performing epilepsy surgery on children with non-lesional brain MRI often results in large lobar ... more Performing epilepsy surgery on children with non-lesional brain MRI often results in large lobar or multilobar resections. The aim of this study was to determine if smaller resections result in a comparable rate of seizure freedom. We reviewed 25 children who had undergone focal corticectomies restricted to one aspect of a single lobe or the insula at our institution within a 5.5-year period. Data collected in the comprehensive non-invasive pre-surgical evaluation (including scalp video-EEG, volumetric MRI, functional MRI, EEG source localization, and SPECT and PET), as well as from invasive recordings performed in each patient, was reviewed. Data from each functional modality was identified as convergent or divergent with the epileptogenic zone using image coregistration. Specific biomarkers (from extra-operative and invasive testing) previously indicated to be indicative of focal epileptogenicity were used to further tailor each resection to an epileptogenic epicentre. Tissue path...
There are limited data on the indications for the use of chronic invasive electroencephalography ... more There are limited data on the indications for the use of chronic invasive electroencephalography (EEG) monitoring (IEM) for pediatric epilepsy surgery. We retrospectively studied 102 children who underwent intracranial monitoring to map critical cortex, localize the epileptogenic region, or resolve divergent findings. We assessed IEM utility based on changes to the resection plan following analysis of noninvasive data. IEM was judged useful in 87% of cases and had greatest utility for resolving discordant data and localizing extratemporal and multilobar epileptogenic zones. IEM data were least useful for seizure onset in the temporal lobe and had little utility for direct cortical stimulation mapping unless functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) revealed atypical language representation or the epileptogenic zone was in proximity to critical cortex. IEM utility was demonstrated for a majority of cases with well-defined indications. The method of assessing utility will facilitate multicentric studies toward developing future consensus and practice guidelines.
Over the last two decades the surgical treatment of epilepsies has become a commonly used and eff... more Over the last two decades the surgical treatment of epilepsies has become a commonly used and effective method for the treatment of intractable epilepsy. However, because of its wide use in various types of centers throughout the world the methodology involved varies significantly throughout the centers. With this article we propose the bases from which a multi-disciplinary team of numerous centers can eventually develop aneffective and acceptable international protocol for the surgical treatment of the epilepsies and the classifications of the centers [REV NEUROL 1998; 27: 305-8].
Epileptic disorders : international epilepsy journal with videotape, 1999
Although multiple cortical tubers are a hallmark of tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC), seizures of... more Although multiple cortical tubers are a hallmark of tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC), seizures often originate from a single tuber, making excisional surgery a therapeutic option for intractable patients. To assess the role of ictal single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) in defining the epileptogenic tuber, we reviewed videoelectroencephalography (V/EEG) data, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and SPECT scans of 15 patients (aged 3 months to 15 years, mean 5.1) with medically resistant partial seizures and TSC. SPECT scans were performed using Tc-99m-hexamethylpropyleneamine oxime (HMPAO) injected within 30 seconds of electrographic seizure onset and were graded on a scale from 1 to 5 (1 weakly perfused, 5 strongly perfused). The scalp EEG revealed localized seizure origin in ten patients; five had concordant hyperperfused SPECT regions consisting of comma-shaped areas surrounding hypoperfused areas in the candidate tuber. Strongly hyperperfused regions (grade 3-5) were n...
Epileptic disorders : international epilepsy journal with videotape, 2013
To identify variables that influence the extent of ictal single-photon emission computed tomograp... more To identify variables that influence the extent of ictal single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) findings in paediatric patients with focal cortical dysplasia (FCD). We visually evaluated 98 ictal SPECT studies from 67 children treated surgically for intractable epilepsy caused by FCD. SPECT findings were classified as "non-localised", "well-localised", and "extensive" and compared with parameters of injected seizures (seizure type and duration, injection time, and scalp EEG ictal pattern), presence of structural pathology on MRI, type of surgery performed after SPECT study, and histological findings. A shorter injection time and duration of injected seizure was associated with more localised SPECT hyperperfusion. SPECT findings were not significantly influenced by type of injected seizure. Widespread ictal scalp EEG patterns were associated with extensive SPECT findings. Larger zones of hyperperfusion were more common in patients with lesion...
We describe the clinical, radiologic, and EEG features of 3 children who had dysplastic gangliocy... more We describe the clinical, radiologic, and EEG features of 3 children who had dysplastic gangliocytomas of the cerebral hemispheres and drug resistant partial seizures that began in infancy. Following cortical resection, 2 are seizure-free and the third almost seizure-free. The dysplastic gangliocytoma may be an important and surgically remediable cause of very early malignant partial seizures.
We assessed the value of therapeutic reevaluation and additional pharmacotherapy in medically int... more We assessed the value of therapeutic reevaluation and additional pharmacotherapy in medically intractable children referred for epilepsy surgery. In 21 children with antiepileptic drug treatment omissions, correcting the omission was ineffective in 19 (90%). Two children (10%), both of whom had structural lesions, achieved significant seizure control with high-dose carbamazepine monotherapy. Therapeutic reevaluation is indicated in all medically intractable children prior to epilepsy surgery.
Focal cortical dysplasia (FCD) is recognized as the major cause of focal intractable epilepsy in ... more Focal cortical dysplasia (FCD) is recognized as the major cause of focal intractable epilepsy in childhood. Various factors influencing postsurgical seizure outcome in pediatric patients with FCD have been reported. To analyze different variables in relation to seizure outcome in order to identify prognostic factors for selection of pediatric patients with FCD for epilepsy surgery. A cohort of 149 patients with histologically confirmed mild malformations of cortical development or FCD with at least 2 years of postoperative follow-up was retrospectively studied; 113 subjects had at least 5 years of postoperative follow-up. Twenty-eight clinical, EEG, MRI, neuropsychological, surgical, and histopathologic parameters were evaluated. The only significant predictor of surgical success was completeness of surgical resection, defined as complete removal of the structural MRI lesion (if present) and the cortical region exhibiting prominent ictal and interictal abnormalities on intracranial EEG. Unfavorable surgical outcomes are mostly caused by overlap of dysplastic and eloquent cortical regions. There were nonsignificant trends toward better outcomes in patients with normal intelligence, after hemispherectomy and with FCD type II. Other factors such as age at seizure onset, duration of epilepsy, seizure frequency, associated pathologies including hippocampal sclerosis, extent of EEG and MRI abnormalities, as well as extent and localization of resections did not influence outcome. Twenty-five percent of patients changed Engel&amp;amp;#39;s class of seizure outcome after the second postoperative year. The ability to define and fully excise the entire region of dysplastic cortex is the most powerful variable influencing outcome in pediatric patients with focal cortical dysplasia.
Background-Congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH) can occur in isolation or in association with ot... more Background-Congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH) can occur in isolation or in association with other abnormalities. We hypothesized that some cases of non-isolated CDH are caused by novel genomic disorders.
Conventional cortical stimulation based on pulses of fixed duration briefer than the chronaxie ra... more Conventional cortical stimulation based on pulses of fixed duration briefer than the chronaxie rarely elicit responses in infants and young children. We developed a stimulation paradigm that relies on increments in both stimulus intensity and pulse duration. This ...
ABSTRACT The pitfalls and difficulties in accurately localizing seizure foci are reviewed. Basic ... more ABSTRACT The pitfalls and difficulties in accurately localizing seizure foci are reviewed. Basic issues regarding modeling, volume conduction, inhomogeneities, and corticocortical propagation are discussed, and the limitations of scalp and intracranial recordings are outlined. The ambiguities in interpreting patterns and their significance are highlighted with a concluding commentary on pitfalls in defining the epileptogenic region.
We present a modified EEG montage that detects small interchannel time differences and assists in... more We present a modified EEG montage that detects small interchannel time differences and assists in localizing the epileptogenic focus. Regions with apparently synchronous epileptic discharges are displayed simultaneously in referential and subtraction derivations. The subtraction derivation is a bipolar configuration of two regions of interest that are not necessarily adjacent. The referential derivation reveals the polarity, voltage, and morphology of the two discharges, and the subtraction derivation detects asynchrony; the combined reference-subtraction derivation thus indicates the region that is activated first.
The authors compared interictal and ictal abnormalities from chronic intracranial recordings in c... more The authors compared interictal and ictal abnormalities from chronic intracranial recordings in children with Taylor-type cortical dysplasia (TTCD) and nondysplastic lesions. Interictal epileptiform discharges and ictal patterns were retrospectively analyzed in 13 children with TTCD and 12 children with nondysplastic lesions (tumor, 4; gliosis, 8). Features analyzed and compared between groups included the morphologic and temporal characteristics and field distribution of ictal and interictal patterns and rapidity of ictal propagation. The frequency of runs of interictal continuous epileptiform discharges (CEDs) or bursts of fast activity did not differ significantly between dysplastic and nondysplastic tissue. Fast frequencies characterized the majority of seizure onsets (49/67) in dysplastic patients and repetitive spikes were more frequent at seizure onset (31/56) in nondysplastic patients (P &amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;lt; 0.002). Field of ictal onset was limited to adjacent cortex and independent of histology. The interval between seizure onset and spread to adjacent or nonadjacent cortex was significantly shorter in dysplastic than nondysplastic patients. Interictal EEG patterns are not specific markers of dysplastic cortex but the morphology of ictal onset differs significantly with dysplastic cortex showing significantly more rapid propagation than nondysplastic cortex. These findings suggest that markers other than CEDs physiologically characterize dysplastic cortex and that children with TTCD exhibit more widespread excitability of neural pathways.
Purpose: Gliomatosis cerebri (GC) is a rare neoplastic disorder that may present as intractable e... more Purpose: Gliomatosis cerebri (GC) is a rare neoplastic disorder that may present as intractable epilepsy during early life. We report our experience regarding the evaluation and the surgical treatment of epilepsy in this population.
Purpose: Prenatal and perinatal adverse events are reported to have a pathogenetic role in focal ... more Purpose: Prenatal and perinatal adverse events are reported to have a pathogenetic role in focal cortical dysplasia (FCD). However, no data are available regarding the prevalence and significance of this association. A cohort of children with significant prenatal and perinatal brain injury and histologically proven mild malformations of cortical development (mMCD) or FCD was analyzed. Methods: We retrospectively evaluated a surgical series of 200 patients with histologically confirmed mMCD/FCD. Combined historical and radiologic inclusion criteria were used to identify patients with prenatal and perinatal risk factors. Electroclinical, imaging, neuropsychological, surgical, histopathologic, and seizure outcome data were reviewed. Results: Prenatal and perinatal insults including severe prematurity, asphyxia, bleeding, hydrocephalus, and stroke occurred in 12.5% of children with mMCD/FCD (n = 25). Their epilepsy was characterized by early seizure onset, high seizure frequency, and absence of seizure control. Patients with significant prenatal and perinatal risk factors had more abnormal neurologic findings, lower intelligence quotient (IQ) scores, and slower background EEG activity than mMCD/FCD subjects without prenatal or perinatal brain injury. MRI evidence of cortical malformations was identified in 74% of patients. Most patients underwent large multilobar resections or hemispherectomies; 54% were seizure-free 2 years after surgery. Histologically ''milder'' forms of cortical malformations (mMCD and FCD type I) were observed most commonly in our series. Conclusions: Surgically remediable low-grade cortical malformations may occur in children with significant prenatally and perinatally acquired encephalopathies and play an important role in the pathogenesis of their epilepsy. Presurgical detection of dysplastic cortex has important practical consequences for surgical planning.
The aim of this study was to investigate the utility of three-dimensional electroencephalography ... more The aim of this study was to investigate the utility of three-dimensional electroencephalography source imaging (3D-ESI) with low-resolution electroencephalographic data in the pediatric noninvasive presurgical evaluation, and to compare the findings with positron emission tomography (PET) and ictal single-photon emission computed tomography (iSPECT). We retrospectively selected 60 patients from a database of 594 patients who underwent excisional surgery for drug-resistant epilepsy. Patients were <18 years at time of surgery, had at least one presurgical volumetric brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and at least 1 year of outcome data. 3D-ESI was performed with NeuroScan software CURRY V.7.0. For each patient the surgical resection was planned utilizing 3D-ESI as an adjunctive tool to supplement MRI and electrocorticographic data. Our analyses addressed three critical variables: pathology (focal cortical dysplasia vs. other pathologies), imaging (MRI negative vs. positive ca...
Epileptic disorders : international epilepsy journal with videotape, Jan 20, 2015
Performing epilepsy surgery on children with non-lesional brain MRI often results in large lobar ... more Performing epilepsy surgery on children with non-lesional brain MRI often results in large lobar or multilobar resections. The aim of this study was to determine if smaller resections result in a comparable rate of seizure freedom. We reviewed 25 children who had undergone focal corticectomies restricted to one aspect of a single lobe or the insula at our institution within a 5.5-year period. Data collected in the comprehensive non-invasive pre-surgical evaluation (including scalp video-EEG, volumetric MRI, functional MRI, EEG source localization, and SPECT and PET), as well as from invasive recordings performed in each patient, was reviewed. Data from each functional modality was identified as convergent or divergent with the epileptogenic zone using image coregistration. Specific biomarkers (from extra-operative and invasive testing) previously indicated to be indicative of focal epileptogenicity were used to further tailor each resection to an epileptogenic epicentre. Tissue path...
There are limited data on the indications for the use of chronic invasive electroencephalography ... more There are limited data on the indications for the use of chronic invasive electroencephalography (EEG) monitoring (IEM) for pediatric epilepsy surgery. We retrospectively studied 102 children who underwent intracranial monitoring to map critical cortex, localize the epileptogenic region, or resolve divergent findings. We assessed IEM utility based on changes to the resection plan following analysis of noninvasive data. IEM was judged useful in 87% of cases and had greatest utility for resolving discordant data and localizing extratemporal and multilobar epileptogenic zones. IEM data were least useful for seizure onset in the temporal lobe and had little utility for direct cortical stimulation mapping unless functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) revealed atypical language representation or the epileptogenic zone was in proximity to critical cortex. IEM utility was demonstrated for a majority of cases with well-defined indications. The method of assessing utility will facilitate multicentric studies toward developing future consensus and practice guidelines.
Over the last two decades the surgical treatment of epilepsies has become a commonly used and eff... more Over the last two decades the surgical treatment of epilepsies has become a commonly used and effective method for the treatment of intractable epilepsy. However, because of its wide use in various types of centers throughout the world the methodology involved varies significantly throughout the centers. With this article we propose the bases from which a multi-disciplinary team of numerous centers can eventually develop aneffective and acceptable international protocol for the surgical treatment of the epilepsies and the classifications of the centers [REV NEUROL 1998; 27: 305-8].
Epileptic disorders : international epilepsy journal with videotape, 1999
Although multiple cortical tubers are a hallmark of tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC), seizures of... more Although multiple cortical tubers are a hallmark of tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC), seizures often originate from a single tuber, making excisional surgery a therapeutic option for intractable patients. To assess the role of ictal single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) in defining the epileptogenic tuber, we reviewed videoelectroencephalography (V/EEG) data, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and SPECT scans of 15 patients (aged 3 months to 15 years, mean 5.1) with medically resistant partial seizures and TSC. SPECT scans were performed using Tc-99m-hexamethylpropyleneamine oxime (HMPAO) injected within 30 seconds of electrographic seizure onset and were graded on a scale from 1 to 5 (1 weakly perfused, 5 strongly perfused). The scalp EEG revealed localized seizure origin in ten patients; five had concordant hyperperfused SPECT regions consisting of comma-shaped areas surrounding hypoperfused areas in the candidate tuber. Strongly hyperperfused regions (grade 3-5) were n...
Epileptic disorders : international epilepsy journal with videotape, 2013
To identify variables that influence the extent of ictal single-photon emission computed tomograp... more To identify variables that influence the extent of ictal single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) findings in paediatric patients with focal cortical dysplasia (FCD). We visually evaluated 98 ictal SPECT studies from 67 children treated surgically for intractable epilepsy caused by FCD. SPECT findings were classified as "non-localised", "well-localised", and "extensive" and compared with parameters of injected seizures (seizure type and duration, injection time, and scalp EEG ictal pattern), presence of structural pathology on MRI, type of surgery performed after SPECT study, and histological findings. A shorter injection time and duration of injected seizure was associated with more localised SPECT hyperperfusion. SPECT findings were not significantly influenced by type of injected seizure. Widespread ictal scalp EEG patterns were associated with extensive SPECT findings. Larger zones of hyperperfusion were more common in patients with lesion...
We describe the clinical, radiologic, and EEG features of 3 children who had dysplastic gangliocy... more We describe the clinical, radiologic, and EEG features of 3 children who had dysplastic gangliocytomas of the cerebral hemispheres and drug resistant partial seizures that began in infancy. Following cortical resection, 2 are seizure-free and the third almost seizure-free. The dysplastic gangliocytoma may be an important and surgically remediable cause of very early malignant partial seizures.
We assessed the value of therapeutic reevaluation and additional pharmacotherapy in medically int... more We assessed the value of therapeutic reevaluation and additional pharmacotherapy in medically intractable children referred for epilepsy surgery. In 21 children with antiepileptic drug treatment omissions, correcting the omission was ineffective in 19 (90%). Two children (10%), both of whom had structural lesions, achieved significant seizure control with high-dose carbamazepine monotherapy. Therapeutic reevaluation is indicated in all medically intractable children prior to epilepsy surgery.
Focal cortical dysplasia (FCD) is recognized as the major cause of focal intractable epilepsy in ... more Focal cortical dysplasia (FCD) is recognized as the major cause of focal intractable epilepsy in childhood. Various factors influencing postsurgical seizure outcome in pediatric patients with FCD have been reported. To analyze different variables in relation to seizure outcome in order to identify prognostic factors for selection of pediatric patients with FCD for epilepsy surgery. A cohort of 149 patients with histologically confirmed mild malformations of cortical development or FCD with at least 2 years of postoperative follow-up was retrospectively studied; 113 subjects had at least 5 years of postoperative follow-up. Twenty-eight clinical, EEG, MRI, neuropsychological, surgical, and histopathologic parameters were evaluated. The only significant predictor of surgical success was completeness of surgical resection, defined as complete removal of the structural MRI lesion (if present) and the cortical region exhibiting prominent ictal and interictal abnormalities on intracranial EEG. Unfavorable surgical outcomes are mostly caused by overlap of dysplastic and eloquent cortical regions. There were nonsignificant trends toward better outcomes in patients with normal intelligence, after hemispherectomy and with FCD type II. Other factors such as age at seizure onset, duration of epilepsy, seizure frequency, associated pathologies including hippocampal sclerosis, extent of EEG and MRI abnormalities, as well as extent and localization of resections did not influence outcome. Twenty-five percent of patients changed Engel&amp;amp;#39;s class of seizure outcome after the second postoperative year. The ability to define and fully excise the entire region of dysplastic cortex is the most powerful variable influencing outcome in pediatric patients with focal cortical dysplasia.
Background-Congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH) can occur in isolation or in association with ot... more Background-Congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH) can occur in isolation or in association with other abnormalities. We hypothesized that some cases of non-isolated CDH are caused by novel genomic disorders.
Conventional cortical stimulation based on pulses of fixed duration briefer than the chronaxie ra... more Conventional cortical stimulation based on pulses of fixed duration briefer than the chronaxie rarely elicit responses in infants and young children. We developed a stimulation paradigm that relies on increments in both stimulus intensity and pulse duration. This ...
ABSTRACT The pitfalls and difficulties in accurately localizing seizure foci are reviewed. Basic ... more ABSTRACT The pitfalls and difficulties in accurately localizing seizure foci are reviewed. Basic issues regarding modeling, volume conduction, inhomogeneities, and corticocortical propagation are discussed, and the limitations of scalp and intracranial recordings are outlined. The ambiguities in interpreting patterns and their significance are highlighted with a concluding commentary on pitfalls in defining the epileptogenic region.
We present a modified EEG montage that detects small interchannel time differences and assists in... more We present a modified EEG montage that detects small interchannel time differences and assists in localizing the epileptogenic focus. Regions with apparently synchronous epileptic discharges are displayed simultaneously in referential and subtraction derivations. The subtraction derivation is a bipolar configuration of two regions of interest that are not necessarily adjacent. The referential derivation reveals the polarity, voltage, and morphology of the two discharges, and the subtraction derivation detects asynchrony; the combined reference-subtraction derivation thus indicates the region that is activated first.
The authors compared interictal and ictal abnormalities from chronic intracranial recordings in c... more The authors compared interictal and ictal abnormalities from chronic intracranial recordings in children with Taylor-type cortical dysplasia (TTCD) and nondysplastic lesions. Interictal epileptiform discharges and ictal patterns were retrospectively analyzed in 13 children with TTCD and 12 children with nondysplastic lesions (tumor, 4; gliosis, 8). Features analyzed and compared between groups included the morphologic and temporal characteristics and field distribution of ictal and interictal patterns and rapidity of ictal propagation. The frequency of runs of interictal continuous epileptiform discharges (CEDs) or bursts of fast activity did not differ significantly between dysplastic and nondysplastic tissue. Fast frequencies characterized the majority of seizure onsets (49/67) in dysplastic patients and repetitive spikes were more frequent at seizure onset (31/56) in nondysplastic patients (P &amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;lt; 0.002). Field of ictal onset was limited to adjacent cortex and independent of histology. The interval between seizure onset and spread to adjacent or nonadjacent cortex was significantly shorter in dysplastic than nondysplastic patients. Interictal EEG patterns are not specific markers of dysplastic cortex but the morphology of ictal onset differs significantly with dysplastic cortex showing significantly more rapid propagation than nondysplastic cortex. These findings suggest that markers other than CEDs physiologically characterize dysplastic cortex and that children with TTCD exhibit more widespread excitability of neural pathways.
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Papers by Trevor Resnick