3 research outputs found

    Hyperkinetic motor seizures: a common semiology generated by two different cortical seizure origins

    No full text
    International audience– We report a 37-year-old, right-handed patient with drug-resistant focal epilepsy whose seizures were characterized by explosive hyperkinetic behaviour. Video-SEEG revealed bifocal organization of epilepsy with two distinct cortical origins of seizures: the right temporal pole and left temporal lateral and perisylvian cortex. Irrespective of the cortical pattern of seizure onset, the hyperkinetic semiology was extremely similar. This supports a major role for " final common pathway " subcortical circuits in the genesis of the hyperkinetic semiology in this patient

    The role of stereoelectroencephalography (SEEG) in reevaluation of epilepsy surgery failures

    No full text
    International audienceManagement of patients after initial epilepsy surgical failure is challenging. In this study, we report our experience in using the stereoelectroencephalography (SEEG) method in the reevaluation of patients after initial epilepsy surgical failure. We selected 28 patients examined through SEEG in our department for drug-resistant focal epilepsy following initial epilepsy surgical failure. For each patient, the residual seizure onset zone (rSOZ) as defined by SEEG was classified as either contiguous if the seizure onset zone (SOZ) was focal and close to the surgical cavity (same lobe) or noncontiguous in cases where the SOZ included site(s) distant from the surgical cavity. The rSOZ was defined according to visual analysis of SEEG traces completed by an estimation of the epileptogenicity index (EI). A second surgical procedure was performed in 12 patients (45%). A favorable outcome (Engel class I or II) was obtained in 9/12 patients (6 in Engel class I, 50%). The proportion of patients that had reoperation was higher in the contiguous group (80%) than in the noncontiguous group (22%) (p = 0.02). A rSOZ localized in close relation to the initial surgical resection zone (contiguous group) was found in 10 patients (35%). Among them, 8 have since undergone reoperation, and a good outcome (Engel class I) was achieved in 5/8 (63%). A rSOZ involving a distant region from the first surgery was observed in 18 patients (65%) (noncontiguous group). Among them, only 4 have undergone reoperation, leading to a failure in 2 (Engel class III or IV) and a good outcome in 2 (IA). Ten patients had a first standard temporal lobectomy, and in 50% of these cases, the insula was involved in the rSOZ. Stereoelectroencephalography offers a unique way to evaluate the rSOZ at the individual level and thus guide further surgical decision-making. The best results are observed in patients having a focal rSOZ close to the site of the surgical resection in the first surgery
    corecore