Frontiers in Neurology (Mar 2022)

Low EEG Gamma Entropy and Glucose Hypometabolism After Corpus Callosotomy Predicts Seizure Outcome After Subsequent Surgery

  • Kenzo Kosugi,
  • Keiya Iijima,
  • Suguru Yokosako,
  • Yutaro Takayama,
  • Yuiko Kimura,
  • Yuu Kaneko,
  • Noriko Sumitomo,
  • Takashi Saito,
  • Eiji Nakagawa,
  • Noriko Sato,
  • Masaki Iwasaki

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2022.831126
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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BackgroundPatients with generalized epilepsy who had lateralized EEG abnormalities after corpus callosotomy (CC) occasionally undergo subsequent surgeries to control intractable epilepsy.ObjectivesThis study evaluated retrospectively the combination of EEG multiscale entropy (MSE) and FDG-PET for identifying lateralization of the epileptogenic zone after CC.MethodsThis study included 14 patients with pharmacoresistant epilepsy who underwent curative epilepsy surgery after CC. Interictal scalp EEG and FDG-PET obtained after CC were investigated to determine (1) whether the MSE calculated from the EEG and FDG-PET findings was lateralized to the surgical side, and (2) whether the lateralization was associated with seizure outcomes.ResultsSeizure reduction rate was higher in patients with lateralized findings to the surgical side than those without (MSE: p < 0.05, FDG-PET: p < 0.05, both: p < 0.01). Seizure free rate was higher in patients with lateralized findings in both MSE and FDG-PET than in those without (p < 0.05).ConclusionsThis study demonstrated that patients with lateralization of MSE and FDG-PET to the surgical side had better seizure outcomes. The combination of MSE and conventional FDG-PET may help to select surgical candidates for additional surgery after CC with good postoperative seizure outcomes.

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