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Optimising EEG-fMRI for Localisation of Focal Epilepsy in Children

BACKGROUND: Early surgical intervention in children with drug resistant epilepsy has benefits but requires using tolerable and minimally invasive tests. EEG-fMRI studies have demonstrated good sensitivity for the localization of epileptic focus but a poor yield although the reasons for this have not...

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Autores principales: Centeno, Maria, Tierney, Tim M., Perani, Suejen, Shamshiri, Elhum A., StPier, Kelly, Wilkinson, Charlotte, Konn, Daniel, Banks, Tina, Vulliemoz, Serge, Lemieux, Louis, Pressler, Ronit M., Clark, Christopher A., Cross, J. Helen, Carmichael, David W
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4752259/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26872220
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0149048
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author Centeno, Maria
Tierney, Tim M.
Perani, Suejen
Shamshiri, Elhum A.
StPier, Kelly
Wilkinson, Charlotte
Konn, Daniel
Banks, Tina
Vulliemoz, Serge
Lemieux, Louis
Pressler, Ronit M.
Clark, Christopher A.
Cross, J. Helen
Carmichael, David W
author_facet Centeno, Maria
Tierney, Tim M.
Perani, Suejen
Shamshiri, Elhum A.
StPier, Kelly
Wilkinson, Charlotte
Konn, Daniel
Banks, Tina
Vulliemoz, Serge
Lemieux, Louis
Pressler, Ronit M.
Clark, Christopher A.
Cross, J. Helen
Carmichael, David W
author_sort Centeno, Maria
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Early surgical intervention in children with drug resistant epilepsy has benefits but requires using tolerable and minimally invasive tests. EEG-fMRI studies have demonstrated good sensitivity for the localization of epileptic focus but a poor yield although the reasons for this have not been systematically addressed. While adults EEG-fMRI studies are performed in the “resting state”; children are commonly sedated however, this has associated risks and potential confounds. In this study, we assessed the impact of the following factors on the tolerability and results of EEG-fMRI in children: viewing a movie inside the scanner; movement; occurrence of interictal epileptiform discharges (IED); scan duration and design efficiency. This work’s motivation is to optimize EEG-fMRI parameters to make this test widely available to paediatric population METHODS: Forty-six children with focal epilepsy and 20 controls (6–18) underwent EEG-fMRI. For two 10 minutes sessions subjects were told to lie still with eyes closed, as it is classically performed in adult studies (“rest sessions”), for another two sessions, subjects watched a child friendly stimulation i.e. movie (“movie sessions”). IED were mapped with EEG-fMRI for each session and across sessions. The resulting maps were classified as concordant/discordant with the presumed epileptogenic focus for each subject. FINDINGS: Movement increased with scan duration, but the movie reduced movement by ~40% when played within the first 20 minutes. There was no effect of movie on the occurrence of IED, nor in the concordance of the test. Ability of EEG-fMRI to map the epileptogenic region was similar for the 20 and 40 minute scan durations. Design efficiency was predictive of concordance. CONCLUSIONS: A child friendly natural stimulus improves the tolerability of EEG-fMRI and reduces in-scanner movement without having an effect on IED occurrence and quality of EEG-fMRI maps. This allowed us to scan children as young as 6 and obtain localising information without sedation. Our data suggest that ~20 minutes is the optimal length of scanning for EEG-fMRI studies in children with frequent IED. The efficiency of the fMRI design derived from spontaneous IED generation is an important factor for producing concordant results.
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spelling pubmed-47522592016-02-26 Optimising EEG-fMRI for Localisation of Focal Epilepsy in Children Centeno, Maria Tierney, Tim M. Perani, Suejen Shamshiri, Elhum A. StPier, Kelly Wilkinson, Charlotte Konn, Daniel Banks, Tina Vulliemoz, Serge Lemieux, Louis Pressler, Ronit M. Clark, Christopher A. Cross, J. Helen Carmichael, David W PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Early surgical intervention in children with drug resistant epilepsy has benefits but requires using tolerable and minimally invasive tests. EEG-fMRI studies have demonstrated good sensitivity for the localization of epileptic focus but a poor yield although the reasons for this have not been systematically addressed. While adults EEG-fMRI studies are performed in the “resting state”; children are commonly sedated however, this has associated risks and potential confounds. In this study, we assessed the impact of the following factors on the tolerability and results of EEG-fMRI in children: viewing a movie inside the scanner; movement; occurrence of interictal epileptiform discharges (IED); scan duration and design efficiency. This work’s motivation is to optimize EEG-fMRI parameters to make this test widely available to paediatric population METHODS: Forty-six children with focal epilepsy and 20 controls (6–18) underwent EEG-fMRI. For two 10 minutes sessions subjects were told to lie still with eyes closed, as it is classically performed in adult studies (“rest sessions”), for another two sessions, subjects watched a child friendly stimulation i.e. movie (“movie sessions”). IED were mapped with EEG-fMRI for each session and across sessions. The resulting maps were classified as concordant/discordant with the presumed epileptogenic focus for each subject. FINDINGS: Movement increased with scan duration, but the movie reduced movement by ~40% when played within the first 20 minutes. There was no effect of movie on the occurrence of IED, nor in the concordance of the test. Ability of EEG-fMRI to map the epileptogenic region was similar for the 20 and 40 minute scan durations. Design efficiency was predictive of concordance. CONCLUSIONS: A child friendly natural stimulus improves the tolerability of EEG-fMRI and reduces in-scanner movement without having an effect on IED occurrence and quality of EEG-fMRI maps. This allowed us to scan children as young as 6 and obtain localising information without sedation. Our data suggest that ~20 minutes is the optimal length of scanning for EEG-fMRI studies in children with frequent IED. The efficiency of the fMRI design derived from spontaneous IED generation is an important factor for producing concordant results. Public Library of Science 2016-02-12 /pmc/articles/PMC4752259/ /pubmed/26872220 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0149048 Text en © 2016 Centeno et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Centeno, Maria
Tierney, Tim M.
Perani, Suejen
Shamshiri, Elhum A.
StPier, Kelly
Wilkinson, Charlotte
Konn, Daniel
Banks, Tina
Vulliemoz, Serge
Lemieux, Louis
Pressler, Ronit M.
Clark, Christopher A.
Cross, J. Helen
Carmichael, David W
Optimising EEG-fMRI for Localisation of Focal Epilepsy in Children
title Optimising EEG-fMRI for Localisation of Focal Epilepsy in Children
title_full Optimising EEG-fMRI for Localisation of Focal Epilepsy in Children
title_fullStr Optimising EEG-fMRI for Localisation of Focal Epilepsy in Children
title_full_unstemmed Optimising EEG-fMRI for Localisation of Focal Epilepsy in Children
title_short Optimising EEG-fMRI for Localisation of Focal Epilepsy in Children
title_sort optimising eeg-fmri for localisation of focal epilepsy in children
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4752259/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26872220
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0149048
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