Title of article
EEG–fMRI mapping of asymmetrical delta activity in a patient with refractory epilepsy is concordant with the epileptogenic region determined by intracranial EEG
Author/Authors
Laufs، نويسنده , , Helmut and Hamandi، نويسنده , , Khalid and Walker، نويسنده , , Matthew C. and Scott، نويسنده , , Catherine and Smith، نويسنده , , Shelagh and Duncan، نويسنده , , John S. and Lemieux، نويسنده , , Louis، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
5
From page
367
To page
371
Abstract
We studied a patient with refractory focal epilepsy using continuous EEG-correlated fMRI. Seizures were characterized by head turning to the left and clonic jerking of the left arm, suggesting a right frontal epileptogenic region. Interictal EEG showed occasional runs of independent nonlateralized slow activity in the delta band with right frontocentral dominance and had no lateralizing value. Ictal scalp EEG had no lateralizing value. Ictal scalp EEG suggested right-sided central slow activity preceding some seizures. Structural 3-T MRI showed no abnormality. There was no clear epileptiform abnormality during simultaneous EEG–fMRI. We therefore modeled asymmetrical EEG delta activity at 1–3 Hz near frontocentral electrode positions. Significant blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) signal changes in the right superior frontal gyrus correlated with right frontal oscillations at 1–3 Hz but not at 4–7 Hz and with neither of the two frequency bands when derived from contralateral or posterior electrode positions, which served as controls. Motor fMRI activations with a finger-tapping paradigm were asymmetrical: they were more anterior for the left hand compared with the right and were near the aforementioned EEG-correlated signal changes. A right frontocentral perirolandic seizure onset was identified with a subdural grid recording, and electric stimulation of the adjacent contact produced motor responses in the left arm and after discharges. The fMRI localization of the left hand motor and the detected BOLD activation associated with modeled slow activity suggest a role for localization of the epileptogenic region with EEG–fMRI even in the absence of clear interictal discharges.
Keywords
FFT , FMRI , EEG , Intracranial , Epilepsy
Journal title
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Record number
1832256
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