| Literature DB >> 34221585 |
Yuta Kobayashi1, Yosuke Sato1, Tatsuya Sugiyama1, Tohru Mizutani1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We have recently demonstrated that gamma oscillation (30-70 Hz) regularity (GOR) analysis accurately localized epileptogenic focus using intraoperative electrocorticographic data. In this report, we assessed whether GOR correlation analysis could depict epileptogenic networks intraoperatively. Dual foci in temporal lobe epilepsy without hippocampal structural abnormalities are difficult to diagnose. Using our GOR correlation analysis, we aimed to intraoperatively visualize such dual foci and epileptogenic networks. CASE DESCRIPTION: A 56-year-old man suffered from pharmacoresistant focal impaired awareness seizures. Magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated an 8 × 12-mm cavernoma in the right inferior temporal gyrus without any structural changes in the hippocampus. Since ictal semiology indicated a high probability of epileptogenicity in the right hippocampus, we reached the hippocampus using a transsylvian approach and assessed intraoperative GOR correlation analysis in the lateral temporal lobe where the cavernoma was located and the hippocampus, simultaneously. High GORs suggestive of epileptogenicity were identified in both the lateral temporal lobe and the hippocampus. Furthermore, they were connected using GOR correlation networks. When the high GOR locations in the lateral temporal lobe and the cavernoma were removed, high GORs and those networks were found within the hippocampus only. After additional hippocampal transection, high GORs and these networks were absent. The patient became seizure-free after the surgery.Entities:
Keywords: Cavernoma; Dual pathology; Epileptogenic network; Gamma oscillation regularity; Sample entropy; Temporal lobe epilepsy
Year: 2021 PMID: 34221585 PMCID: PMC8247660 DOI: 10.25259/SNI_298_2021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Surg Neurol Int ISSN: 2152-7806
Figure 1:(a) Pre-operative MRI of coronal section. Fluid-attenuated inversion recovery sequence revealed 8 × 12 mm cavernoma in the right inferior temporal gyrus (arrow). Neither reduced hippocampal volume nor enlarged temporal horn, which are typical structural findings of mesial temporal lobe epilepsy, could be seen. (b) Iomazenil-single-photon emission computed tomography showed decreased accumulation in the right mesial temporal lobe (c) The postoperative brain MRI showed complete resection of cavernoma (a) and hippocampal transection (b).
Figure 2:(a) Electrocorticography (ECoG) before cavernoma resection. The upper eight lows are the 2 × 4 strip electrodes on the right temporal lobe, the lower 4 lows are the 1 × 4 strip electrodes on the right hippocampus. ECoG showed synchronized spikes (↑) in the lateral temporal lobe and hippocampus, and isolated spikes (↓) in the hippocampus. (b) Intraoperative photograph of the brain surface before cavernoma resection. Upper: The right six dots are the 2 × 4 strip electrodes, and the lower-left four dots are the 1 × 4 strip electrodes. They are colored using a gamma oscillation regularity (GOR) map. The red dotted circle in the GOR map shows the area with a significantly high GOR, while the blue dotted circle in the GOR map shows the area with a low GOR. Both electrodes exhibited a high GOR. The lines connecting the dots show the electrical network analyzed by the GOR. (c) ECoG after cavernoma resection. The negative spikes in the 2 × 4 strip electrodes disappeared. On the 1 × 4 strip electrodes, synchronized positive spikes disappeared, but a negative spike remained. (d) Intraoperative photograph of the brain surface after cavernoma resection. The 2 × 4 strip electrodes showed decreased GOR, whereas a high GOR remained in the 1 × 4 strip electrodes. Networks were found only in the hippocampus. (e) ECoG after cavernoma resection. The negative spikes observed in the 1 × 4 strip electrodes disappeared. (f) Intraoperative photograph of the brain surface after hippocampal transection. The GOR decreased in the hippocampus, and the network was absent.