| Literature DB >> 36114472 |
Kazuaki Sato1, Kazuki Nakahara2, Kaoru Obata3, Ryota Matsunari4, Rie Suzuki-Tsuburaya5, Hiromitsu Tabata6, Masako Kinoshita7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The cerebellum plays an important role in motor control, however, its involvement in epilepsy has not been fully understood. Arterial spin labelling perfusion magnetic resonance image (ASL) is a noninvasive method to evaluate cerebral and cerebellar blood flow. We investigated cerebellar perfusion in patients with epileptic seizures using ASL.Entities:
Keywords: Arterial spin labeling; Cerebellum; Epilepsy; Hyperperfusion; Lobule VIIb; Magnetic resonance image
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36114472 PMCID: PMC9479261 DOI: 10.1186/s12883-022-02882-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.903
Fig. 1A Six patients with epilepsy, showing hyperperfusion of ASL in selective areas the cerebellar paravermis of lobule VIIb. Four patients (Patient 1, 3, 4, and 5) showed hypoperfusion of the VIIb lobule in short PLD conditions (1525 msec in Patient 1 and Patient 4, 1525 and 1800 msec in Patient 3, and 1800 msec in Patient 5) and showed hyperperfusion of the same region in longer PLD conditions. In Patient 4 and Patient 5 with focal epilepsy manifesting with asymmetrical motor symptoms, cerebellar hyperperfusion was found on the opposite side to the seizure focus estimated by seizure semiology. B Axial ASL images of Patient 1. At the bottom of the right cerebellum, hypoperfusion in PLD 1525 msec and hyperperfusion in PLD 1800 and 2500 msec are seen. In the left thalamus, hypoperfusion in PLD 1800 and 2500 msec is shown. C Co-registration of ASL to FLAIR images. ASL: arterial spin labeling, PLD: post labeling delay, FLAIR: fluid-attenuated inversion-recovery, M/F: male/female, EEG: electroencephalogram, R: right, L: left, Bil: bilateral, G: generalized, F: frontal, C: central, P: parietal, O: occipital, T: temporal, pT: posteriotemporal, PPR: photoparoxysmal response
Patient demopgraphics
| Patient | Age, M/F | Antiepileptic medication | Order of examinations | Interval between examinations (min) | Seizures during and between examinations | Time since last seizure |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 60s F | none | EEG - > MRI | 59 | (+), frequent eyelid myoclonia and hand/fingers myoclonic seizures | – |
| 2 | 20s F | LTG 25 mg | MRI - > EEG | 35 | (−) | > 2 years |
| 3 | 10s F | none | EEG - > MRI | 200 | (+), FAS (dizziness) during EEG | – |
| 4 | 20s F | VPA 600 mg, LTG 350 mg, LCM 450 mg; DZP 20 mg (i.m. and i.v.) and fosPHT 1125 mg (d.i.v.) from 180 min to 60 min before MRI | MRI - > EEG | 34 | (+), status epilepticus of FIAS (conjugation to R, tonic convulsion of R limbs) | – |
| 5 | 30s F | PHT 275 mg | EEG - > MRI | 24 | (−) | 1 day |
| 6 | 50s F | LEV 1000 mg | EEG - > MRI | 37 | (−) | 2 years |
M/F male/female, EEG electroencephalogram, MRI magnetic resonance image, R right, FAS focal aware seizures, FIAS focal impaired awareness seizures, LTG lamotrigine, VPA valproate, LCM lacosamide, DZP diazepam, fosPHT fosphenytoin, i.m. intramuscular, i.v. intravenous, d.i.v intravenous drip
Fig. 2A Electroencephalogram of Patient 1. Before treatment (left), generalized spike-wave complexes are seen; focal spikes in the right frontal and left temporal areas and photoparoxysmal responses were noticed (data not shown). After treatment (right), amplitude of spikes is decreased. Electrodes placement: International 10–20 + T1/T2. Sampling rate: 500 Hz. AC amplifier low frequency filter: 0.08 Hz. B Arterial spin labeling images of Patient 1, post labelling delay of 1800 msec. Before treatment (left), the right cerebellar hyperperfusion and the left thalamic hypoperfusion are shown. After treatment (right), these abnormalities are not detected