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Cingulate epilepsy: report of 3 electroclinical subtypes with surgical outcomes.

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TLDR
Posterior cingulate gyrus epilepsy may present with electroclinical findings that are suggestive of temporal lobe epilepsy and can be considered as another example of pseudotemporal epilepsies.
Abstract
Importance The literature on cingulate gyrus epilepsy in the magnetic resonance imaging era is limited to case reports and small case series. To our knowledge, this is the largest study of surgically confirmed epilepsy arising from the anterior or posterior cingulate region. Objective To characterize the clinical and electrophysiological findings of epilepsies arising from the anterior and posterior cingulate gyrus. Design, Setting, and Participants We studied consecutive cingulate gyrus epilepsy cases identified retrospectively from the Cleveland Clinic and University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center epilepsy databases from 1992 to 2009. Participants included 14 consecutive cases of cingulate gyrus epilepsies confirmed by restricted magnetic resonance image lesions and seizure freedom or marked improvement following lesionectomy. Main Outcomes and Measures The main outcome measure was improvement in seizure frequency following surgery. The clinical, video electroencephalography, neuroimaging, pathology, and surgical outcome data were reviewed. Results All 14 patients had cingulate epilepsy confirmed by restricted magnetic resonance image lesions and seizure freedom or marked improvement following lesionectomy. They were divided into 3 groups based on anatomical location of the lesion and corresponding seizure semiology. In the posterior cingulate group, all 4 patients had electroclinical findings suggestive of temporal origin of the epilepsy. The anterior cingulate cases were divided into a typical (Bancaud) group (6 cases with hypermotor seizures and infrequent generalization with the presence of fear, laughter, or severe interictal personality changes) and an atypical group (4 cases presenting with simple motor seizures and a tendency for more frequent generalization and less-favorable long-term surgical outcome). All atypical cases were associated with an underlying infiltrative astrocytoma. Conclusions and Relevance Posterior cingulate gyrus epilepsy may present with electroclinical findings that are suggestive of temporal lobe epilepsy and can be considered as another example of pseudotemporal epilepsies. The electroclinical presentation and surgical outcome of lesional anterior cingulate epilepsy is possibly influenced by the underlying pathology. This study highlights the difficulty in localizing seizures arising from the cingulate gyrus in the absence of a magnetic resonance image lesion.

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Application of MRI Post-processing in Presurgical Evaluation of Non-lesional Cingulate Epilepsy.

TL;DR: Using a voxel-based MRI post-processing technique implemented in a morphometric analysis program (MAP) to facilitate detection of subtle epileptogenic lesions in CE, thereby improving surgical evaluation of patients with CE with non-lesional MRI by visual inspection.
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Indications and limits of stereoelectroencephalography (SEEG).

TL;DR: In the following chapter, some specific indications are discussed (temporal or extra-temporal, lesional or non-lesional epilepsies) as well as the limits of the SEEG technique, with respect to some epileptological issues during presurgical evaluation.
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Reversible antisocial behavior in ventromedial prefrontal lobe epilepsy

TL;DR: It is hypothesized that the occurrence of frequent seizures in this region over a prolonged period produces functional damage leading to impaired prefrontal control of social behavior, which is reversible since successful epilepsy surgery markedly improved antisocial behavior in these patients.
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Temporal lobe epilepsy in patients with nonlesional MRI and normal memory: an SEEG study

TL;DR: A comprehensive stereoelectroencephalography analysis in patients with TLE with normal MRI images and memory scores demonstrates normal memory does not preclude mesial temporal seizure onset and extratemporal seizure onset is rare when video EEG and semiology are consistent with focal TLE.
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Stereotactic MRI-guided laser interstitial thermal therapy for extratemporal lobe epilepsy.

TL;DR: This work assesses safety and effectiveness of MRg‐LITT for extratemporal lobe epilepsy (ETLE) in patients who are considered less favorable for open resection.
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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: The cingulate epilepsy syndrome provides important support of experimental animal and human functional imaging studies for the role of anterior cingulates cortex in movement, affect and social behaviours.
Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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