| Literature DB >> 26748554 |
Johannes Schurr1, Roland Coras1, Karl Rössler2, Tom Pieper3, Manfred Kudernatsch3, Hans Holthausen3, Peter Winkler3, Friedrich Woermann4, Christian G Bien4, Tilman Polster4, Reinhard Schulz4, Thilo Kalbhenn5, Horst Urbach6,7, Albert Becker8, Thomas Grunwald9, Hans-Juergen Huppertz9, Antonio Gil-Nagel10, Rafael Toledano10, Martha Feucht11, Angelika Mühlebner11,12, Thomas Czech13, Ingmar Blümcke1.
Abstract
The histopathological spectrum of human epileptogenic brain lesions is widespread including common and rare variants of cortical malformations. However, 2-26% of epilepsy surgery specimens are histopathologically classified as nonlesional. We hypothesized that these specimens include also new diagnostic entities, in particular when presurgical magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can identify abnormal signal intensities within the anatomical region of seizure onset. In our series of 1381 en bloc resected epilepsy surgery brain specimens, 52 cases could not be histopathologically classified and were considered nonlesional (3.7%). An increase of Olig2-, and PDGFR-alpha-immunoreactive oligodendroglia was observed in white matter and deep cortical layers in 22 of these patients (42%). Increased proliferation activity as well as heterotopic neurons in white matter were additional histopathological hallmarks. All patients suffered from frontal lobe epilepsy (FLE) with a median age of epilepsy onset at 4 years and 16 years at epilepsy surgery. Presurgical MRI suggested focal cortical dysplasia (FCD) in all patients. We suggest to classify this characteristic histopathology pattern as "mild malformation of cortical development with oligodendroglial hyperplasia (MOGHE)." Further insights into pathomechanisms of MOGHE may help to bridge the diagnostic gap in children and young adults with difficult-to-treat FLE.Entities:
Keywords: epilepsy; frontal lobe; hyperplasia; neuropathology; oligodendrocytes
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26748554 DOI: 10.1111/bpa.12347
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Pathol ISSN: 1015-6305 Impact factor: 6.508