| Literature DB >> 33809843 |
Bożena Adamczyk1, Karolina Węgrzyn1, Tomasz Wilczyński1, Justyna Maciarz1, Natalia Morawiec1, Monika Adamczyk-Sowa1.
Abstract
Epilepsy is a common neurological disorder characterized by chronic, unprovoked and recurrent seizures, which are the result of rapid and excessive bioelectric discharges in nerve cells. Neuroimaging is used to detect underlying structural abnormalities which may be associated with epilepsy. This paper reviews the most common abnormalities, such as hippocampal sclerosis, malformations of cortical development and vascular malformation, detected by neuroimaging in patients with epilepsy to help understand the correlation between these changes and the course, treatment and prognosis of epilepsy. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) reveals structural changes in the brain which are described in this review. Recent studies indicate the usefulness of additional imaging techniques. The use of fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) improves surgical outcomes in MRI-negative cases of focal cortical dysplasia. Some techniques, such as quantitative image analysis, magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS), functional MRI (fMRI), diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) and fibre tract reconstruction, can detect small malformations-which means that some of the epilepsies can be treated surgically. Quantitative susceptibility mapping may become the method of choice in vascular malformations. Neuroimaging determines appropriate diagnosis and treatment and helps to predict prognosis.Entities:
Keywords: epilepsy; focal cortical dysplasia; hippocampal sclerosis; neuroimaging examinations; tumours; vascular malformations
Year: 2021 PMID: 33809843 PMCID: PMC8004256 DOI: 10.3390/medicina57030294
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicina (Kaunas) ISSN: 1010-660X Impact factor: 2.430
The most common imaging abnormalities.
| Imaging | Application | Diseases |
|---|---|---|
|
| - detection of HS characterized by the loss of internal structures, decreased volume and increased signal in T2-weighted images | HS |
| - imaging of thickening or pseudothickening of the grey matter | FCD | |
| - visualization of cortical gyration with an aspect of cortical thickening and shallow sulci and irregularity of the grey-white matter interface | Polymicrogyria | |
| - visualization of the overgrowth of one cerebral hemisphere to achieve better outcome after surgical treatment | Hemimegencephaly | |
| - imaging of cortical hyperintense areas to evaluate the risk of PTE | PTE | |
| - gold standard in tumour evaluation and follow-up | Tumour-related epilepsy | |
|
| - detection of FCD in MRI-negative cases to improve surgical outcome | FCD |
|
| - determination of the lesion extension | FCD |
|
| - localization of the epileptogenic zone | FCD |
|
| - analysis of different cortical layers based on the amount of iron, white matter fibres or vascular density | FCD |
|
| - imaging of frontal or temporal lesions to evaluate the risk of PTE | PTE |
| - detection of the majority of tumours except some LGGs, calcifications and bone lesions | Tumour-related epilepsy | |
|
| - visualization of biochemical aspects of brain changes | PTE |
| - IDH mutation indicative of LGG | Tumour-related epilepsy | |
|
| - provision of data on altered and compensational brain activity due to injury | PTE |
|
| - more sensitive in detecting traumatic lesions and haematomas | PTE |
|
| - useful in guiding long-term therapy by helping to establish patient prognosis | PTE |
|
| - differential diagnosis in ring-enhancing lesions | Tumour-related epilepsy |
|
| - differential diagnosis of nonrapidly progressing tumours e.g., DNETs and LGGs; normal uptake can be indicative of DNET | Tumour-related epilepsy |
|
| - detection of haemorrhage, iron deposition and small vascular malformations in CCM | Vascular malformations |
|
| - diagnosis of CIM | Vascular malformations |
|
| - detection of hemispheric atrophy in RE before it is visible on MRI | Vascular malformations |
|
| - visualization of blood flow and angioarchitecture in AVMs | Vascular malformations |
HS—hippocampal sclerosis, FCD—focal cortical dysplasia, MRI—magnetic resonance imaging, FDG-PET—fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography, MEG—magnetoencephalography, UHF—ultra-high-field, PTE—post-traumatic epilepsy, CT—computed tomography, MRS—magnetic resonance spectroscopy, TBI—traumatic brain injury, fMRI—functional MRI, FLAIR—fluid-attenuated inversion recovery, PET—positron emission tomography, SPECT—single-photon emission computed tomography, LGG—low-grade glioma, Cho—choline, Cr—creatine, DW-MRI—diffusion-weighted MRI, 19Met-PET—[19C]-methionine PET, DNET—dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumours, CCM—cerebral cavernous malformations, GRE—gradient-recalled echo sequences, SWI—susceptibility-weighted imaging, CSF—cerebrospinal fluid, CIM—Chiari 1 malformation, RE—Rasmussen’s encephalitis, 3D TOF MRA—tridimensional time-of-flight MR angiography, TR MRA—time-resolved MR angiography, AVMs—arteriovenous malformations.
Clinical features of epilepsy-related disorders [77,78,79].
| Disease | Clinical Features |
|---|---|
| Hippocampal sclerosis | - seizures |
| Malformations of cortical development: | - seizures |
| Tuberous sclerosis complex | - seizures |
| Low-grade gliomas | - seizures |
| Dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumours | - prolonged temporal seizures |
| Vascular malformations: | - seizures |
| Hypothalamic hamartoma | - seizures |
| Rasmussen’s encephalitis | - seizures |