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Frontal seizures recorded by magnetoencephalography. Case report
C. Amo , A. Esteban , A. Fernández-Lucas , M. Galiano , F. Maestú , M. Martín-Moro , T. Ortiz , J.A. Periáñez , J. Prieto-Montalvo , M. Santiuste-Díaz
Article Info
Abstract
INTRODUCTION This paper reports the usefulness of magnetoencephalography (MEG) in the anatomical localization of the onset and spread of seizures.
CASE REPORT In a 34-year-old male patient who suffered from drug-resistant complex partial seizures (sometimes generalized) with loss of awareness, magnetic resonance imaging revealed a probable left frontobasal cortical dysplasia. Ictal scalp electroencephalogram showed left frontotemporal theta waves. Electrocorticography (ECoG) registered interictal polyspike discharges and located the seizure onset in the lateral orbital side of the left frontal lobe. Three seizures were registered by MEG, clinically similar to the ones usually experienced by the patient. MEG ictal spike dipole location showed seizure onset coming from the left inferior frontal gyrus (as the ECoG), spreading on to other frontal areas, insula and temporal lobe, all in the left hemisphere. CONCLUSION. MEG may be considered as a useful diagnosis modality in the study of partial seizure physiopathology as well as in its presurgical evaluation.
CASE REPORT In a 34-year-old male patient who suffered from drug-resistant complex partial seizures (sometimes generalized) with loss of awareness, magnetic resonance imaging revealed a probable left frontobasal cortical dysplasia. Ictal scalp electroencephalogram showed left frontotemporal theta waves. Electrocorticography (ECoG) registered interictal polyspike discharges and located the seizure onset in the lateral orbital side of the left frontal lobe. Three seizures were registered by MEG, clinically similar to the ones usually experienced by the patient. MEG ictal spike dipole location showed seizure onset coming from the left inferior frontal gyrus (as the ECoG), spreading on to other frontal areas, insula and temporal lobe, all in the left hemisphere. CONCLUSION. MEG may be considered as a useful diagnosis modality in the study of partial seizure physiopathology as well as in its presurgical evaluation.
Keywords
- Electrocorticography
- Frontal seizures
- Localization
- Magnetoencephalography
- Spreading
