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October 01, 1993; 43 (10) Articles

Frontal lobe epilepsy

Clinical seizure characteristics and localization with ictal 99mTc‐HMPAO SPECT

A. S. Harvey, I. J. Hopkins, J. M. SBowe, D. J. Cook, L. K. Shield, S. F. Berkovic
First published October 1, 1993, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1212/WNL.43.10.1966
A. S. Harvey
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I. J. Hopkins
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J. M. SBowe
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D. J. Cook
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L. K. Shield
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S. F. Berkovic
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Citation
Frontal lobe epilepsy
Clinical seizure characteristics and localization with ictal 99mTc‐HMPAO SPECT
A. S. Harvey, I. J. Hopkins, J. M. SBowe, D. J. Cook, L. K. Shield, S. F. Berkovic
Neurology Oct 1993, 43 (10) 1966; DOI: 10.1212/WNL.43.10.1966

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Abstract

We evaluated ictal 99mtechnetium hexamethyl propylene-amine-oxime single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) in 22 children with electroclinical features of frontal lobe epilepsy (FLE). Ictal SPECT demonstrated unilateral frontal hyperperfusion in 20 of 22 children (91%) (one lobar, two frontocentral, six dorsolateral, six frontopolar, three orbitofrontal, one medial frontal, and one insula), concordant with electroclinical lateralization in 19 of 20 (95%). Hyperperfusion was evident in the ipsilateral basal ganglia in 16 of 22 (73%) and the contralateral cerebellum in 14 of 22 children (64%). Interictal SPECT showed unilateral, localized frontal hypoperfusion concordant with electroclinical lateralization in only two of 22 children (9%). Ictal SPECT localization to the frontocentral, medial frontal, or dorsolateral regions was associated with asymmetric tonic posturing, contralateral head/eye deviation, and unilateral clonic jerking (p < 0.01). Ictal SPECT localization to the frontopolar or orbitofrontal regions was associated with vocalization, hyperventilation, truncal flexion, and complex gestural automatisms (p ≥ 0.05). Ictal SPECT has the potential to (1) localize seizures in patients with intractable FLE, and (2) advance understanding of the in vivo anatomico-clinical relationships of frontal lobe seizures.

  • © 1993 by the American Academy of Neurology

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