| Literature DB >> 22953057 |
Eduard Bercovici1, Balagobal Santosh Kumar, Seyed M Mirsattari.
Abstract
Complex partial seizures (CPSs) can present with various semiologies, while mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (mTLE) is a well-recognized cause of CPS, neocortical temporal lobe epilepsy (nTLE) albeit being less common is increasingly recognized as separate disease entity. Differentiating the two remains a challenge for epileptologists as many symptoms overlap due to reciprocal connections between the neocortical and the mesial temporal regions. Various studies have attempted to correctly localize the seizure focus in nTLE as patients with this disorder may benefit from surgery. While earlier work predicted poor outcomes in this population, recent work challenges those ideas yielding good outcomes in part due to better localization using improved anatomical and functional techniques. This paper provides a comprehensive review of the diagnostic workup, particularly the application of recent advances in electroencephalography and functional brain imaging, in neocortical temporal lobe epilepsy.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22953057 PMCID: PMC3420667 DOI: 10.1155/2012/103160
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epilepsy Res Treat ISSN: 2090-1348
Comparison of ictal semiology between mTLE and nTLE based on data from references (see text). If <5% of group were reported to have symptom then it would be designated yes/no. Otherwise it would be described based on likelihood (more or less likely).
| Sign/symptom | mTLE | nTLE |
|---|---|---|
| Seizure duration | >1 minute | <1 minute |
| Ambiguous onset/offset | No | Yes |
| Visceral/epigastric sensation | More likely | Less likely |
| Nonspecific auras | Less likely | More likely |
| Auditory hallucination | Less likely | More likely |
| Oral automatism | More likely | Less likely |
| Manual automatism | More likely | Less likely |
| Leg movements | Yes | No |
| Dystonic posturing | Yes | No |
| Clonic movement | Less likely | More likely |
| Body shifting | More likely | Less likely |
| Hyperventilation | Yes | No |
| “Dreamy state” | Yes | No |
| Fear | Yes | No |
| Searching | More likely | Less likely |
| Postictal cough/sigh | More likely | Yes |
Figure 1EEG of a 37-year-old right-handed male with complex partial seizures since 16 years of age characterized by speech arrest, transient impaired consciousness, automatisms with right hand, and secondary generalization, with no contributory antecedent history.
Figure 2High-frequency oscillations (HFOs) occurring at the same time as spikes (a, c, e, and possibly f) and outside of spikes (b and d). The black trace is the original EEG. The red and blue traces result from high-pass filtering at 80 and 250 Hz, respectively. The amplitude of these traces has been multiplied by 10 to facilitate viewing (Source: http://www.mni.mcgill.ca/, permission obtained from author).