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Outcome of surgery in children with focal cortical dysplasia younger than 5 years explored by stereo-electroencephalography

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TLDR
Although children with FCD can successfully undergo resective surgery without invasive EEG, poor seizure semiology at this age inclines to perform SEEG when the dysplastic lesion is ill-defined and/or the electroclinical correlation is unclear.
Abstract
Focal cortical dysplasia (FCD) is the most frequent etiology for drug-resistant epilepsy in young children. Complete removal of the lesion is mandatory to cure the epilepsy. Stereo-EEG (SEEG) is an excellent method to delimitate the zone to be resected in older children and adults. We studied its feasibility in younger children. We retrospectively studied 19 children under 5 years of age who underwent SEEG between January 2009 and December 2012 and were subsequently operated on. FCD was diagnosed in all. We reviewed magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), electrophysiological and clinical data, as well as postoperative seizure outcome. We also included fluoro-deoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) studies, which had been systematically performed before invasive recording in 16 of the 19 children. The mean patient’s age at the time of SEEG was 38.6 months, and the mean age at seizure onset was 8 months. Three patients had normal MRI. No SEEG-associated complications occurred. We were able to delineate the epileptogenic zone in all children, and electrode stimulation localized the motor area when necessary (12 patients). Hypometabolic areas on FDG-PET included the epileptogenic zone in 13 of the 16 children, with a lobar concordance in 9 (56 %) and the same anatomical extent in 6 (38 %). Twelve children subsequently underwent focal or sublobar resection, six had multilobar resection, and one had hemispherotomy. The etiology was FCD type 2 in 15 and FCD type 1 or type 3 in three children. Eighty-four percent of our population have remained seizure-free at a mean follow-up of 29 months (12–48 months). Although children with FCD can successfully undergo resective surgery without invasive EEG, poor seizure semiology at this age inclines to perform SEEG when the dysplastic lesion is ill-defined and/or the electroclinical correlation is unclear. In cases with normal imaging as well as with suspected huge malformations, as was the case in 52 % of our patients, we consider it to be indispensable.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Is SEEG safe? A systematic review and meta-analysis of stereo-electroencephalography–related complications

TL;DR: The goal of this study is to quantitatively review the incidence of various surgical complications associated with SEEG electrode implantation in the literature and to provide a summary estimate to allow physicians to accurately counsel their patients about the potential complications related to this method of extraoperative invasive monitoring.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dissecting the genetic basis of focal cortical dysplasia: a large cohort study

TL;DR: This study indicates that mMCD/FCD1 and FCD2/HME are two distinct genetic entities: while all FCD1/FCD2 are mosaic mTORopathies, mMCD-pathway-hyperactivating variants, and ~ 30% of the cases are related to glycosylation defects.
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Implantation of Stereoelectroencephalography Electrodes: A Systematic Review.

TL;DR: Rigorous SEEG, thanks to its basic principles and updated technologies, is a safe and accurate method to define the epileptogenic zone by means of stereotactically implanted intracerebral electrodes.
Journal ArticleDOI

A new tool for touch-free patient registration for robot-assisted intracranial surgery: application accuracy from a phantom study and a retrospective surgical series.

TL;DR: The results of the retrospective surgical series analysis suggest that Neurolocate-based procedures can be more accurate than the frame-based ones, and the safety profile of Neurol locate-based registration should be similar to that of frame- based registration.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stereoelectroencephalography: Indication and Efficacy.

TL;DR: Searoelectroencephalography is applicable as a therapeutic alternative for deep-seated lesions, e.g., nodular heterotopia, in nonoperative epilepsies using SEEG-guided radiofrequency thermocoagulation.
References
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Book

Surgical treatment of the epilepsies

Jerome Engel
TL;DR: This work aims toward a surgical cure for epilepsy - the work of Wilder Penfield and his school at the Montreal Neurologic Institute, William Feindel.
Journal ArticleDOI

The clinicopathologic spectrum of focal cortical dysplasias: A consensus classification proposed by an ad hoc Task Force of the ILAE Diagnostic Methods Commission

TL;DR: Focal cortical dysplasias (FCD) are localized regions of malformed cerebral cortex and are very frequently associated with epilepsy in both children and adults.
Journal ArticleDOI

Focal cortical dysplasia: neuropathological subtypes, EEG, neuroimaging and surgical outcome.

TL;DR: A simplified classification of focal cortical dysplasias based on easily recognized histopathological characteristics and avoids complicated terminology is proposed, while the distinctive ensemble of other characteristics defines clinically homogeneous groups.
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Concepts of Myelin and Myelination in Neuroradiology

TL;DR: Only by understanding the physiologic properties and structure of myelin can the authors use MR imaging to its fullest capacity for studying patients with myelin disorders, and this will be critical to using MR imaging techniques optimally to diagnose and study these disorders further.
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