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Morphometric analysis program: Detection of epileptic foci in young children using an adult normative database: Initial experience

OBJECTIVE: To report our initial experience using an adult‐template MAP in drug‐resistant focal epilepsy in five children with apparently normal MRI. METHODS: Patients selected were highly suspicious of harboring focal structural lesions and had negative brain MRI studies. MAP was performed using a...

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Autores principales: Stecher, Ximena, Schonstedt, Valeria, Manterola, Carla, Carreño, Fernando, Zamorano, Francisco, Velasquez, Alvaro, Castillo, Mauricio
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7918321/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33681667
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/epi4.12456
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author Stecher, Ximena
Schonstedt, Valeria
Manterola, Carla
Carreño, Fernando
Zamorano, Francisco
Velasquez, Alvaro
Castillo, Mauricio
author_facet Stecher, Ximena
Schonstedt, Valeria
Manterola, Carla
Carreño, Fernando
Zamorano, Francisco
Velasquez, Alvaro
Castillo, Mauricio
author_sort Stecher, Ximena
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: To report our initial experience using an adult‐template MAP in drug‐resistant focal epilepsy in five children with apparently normal MRI. METHODS: Patients selected were highly suspicious of harboring focal structural lesions and had negative brain MRI studies. MAP was performed using a locally obtained adult database as a template. Results were reviewed by two neuroradiologists. Pertinence of MAP‐positive areas was confirmed by the focal epileptic hypothesis or by pathology when possible (J Neuroradiol, 39, 2012, 87). Visual analysis was performed using Mango Software. MRI studies were reanalyzed at the workstation with knowledge of the clinical suspicion to confirm or discard the possibility of FCD. RESULTS: Five patients aged 19‐48 months were studied, all with initial 3T MRI studies interpreted as normal. All had focal epileptic hypothesis with coherence of clinical seizure characterization and electroencephalographic findings. In two patients, histology showed type 1 FCD. Due to the age of our subjects, the junction map always highlighted the subcortical white matter in relationship to maturity differences. FCD was identified as asymmetric U‐shaped highlighted regions in the junction map. SIGNIFICANCE: FCD is the most frequent pathology reported in pediatric epilepsy surgery series (Epileptic Disord, 18, 2016, 240). Significant number of FCDs may be overlooked on MRIs, reducing the odds of seizure freedom after surgery (Epilepsy Res, 89, 2010, 310). MAP is an image postprocessing method for enhanced visualization of FCD; however, when using an adult template in developing brains, normal subcortical regions may be highlighted as pathological. Creating a pediatric template is difficult, due to the need for general anesthesia to acquire the MRI database. Here, we were able to show that MAP identified FCDs as asymmetric “U‐” shaped highlighted regions in the junction maps of all five patients, which may indicate that obtaining childhood databases for this purpose may not be necessary and that adult ones suffice for diagnosis of FCD.
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spelling pubmed-79183212021-03-05 Morphometric analysis program: Detection of epileptic foci in young children using an adult normative database: Initial experience Stecher, Ximena Schonstedt, Valeria Manterola, Carla Carreño, Fernando Zamorano, Francisco Velasquez, Alvaro Castillo, Mauricio Epilepsia Open Preliminary Reports OBJECTIVE: To report our initial experience using an adult‐template MAP in drug‐resistant focal epilepsy in five children with apparently normal MRI. METHODS: Patients selected were highly suspicious of harboring focal structural lesions and had negative brain MRI studies. MAP was performed using a locally obtained adult database as a template. Results were reviewed by two neuroradiologists. Pertinence of MAP‐positive areas was confirmed by the focal epileptic hypothesis or by pathology when possible (J Neuroradiol, 39, 2012, 87). Visual analysis was performed using Mango Software. MRI studies were reanalyzed at the workstation with knowledge of the clinical suspicion to confirm or discard the possibility of FCD. RESULTS: Five patients aged 19‐48 months were studied, all with initial 3T MRI studies interpreted as normal. All had focal epileptic hypothesis with coherence of clinical seizure characterization and electroencephalographic findings. In two patients, histology showed type 1 FCD. Due to the age of our subjects, the junction map always highlighted the subcortical white matter in relationship to maturity differences. FCD was identified as asymmetric U‐shaped highlighted regions in the junction map. SIGNIFICANCE: FCD is the most frequent pathology reported in pediatric epilepsy surgery series (Epileptic Disord, 18, 2016, 240). Significant number of FCDs may be overlooked on MRIs, reducing the odds of seizure freedom after surgery (Epilepsy Res, 89, 2010, 310). MAP is an image postprocessing method for enhanced visualization of FCD; however, when using an adult template in developing brains, normal subcortical regions may be highlighted as pathological. Creating a pediatric template is difficult, due to the need for general anesthesia to acquire the MRI database. Here, we were able to show that MAP identified FCDs as asymmetric “U‐” shaped highlighted regions in the junction maps of all five patients, which may indicate that obtaining childhood databases for this purpose may not be necessary and that adult ones suffice for diagnosis of FCD. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2021-01-13 /pmc/articles/PMC7918321/ /pubmed/33681667 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/epi4.12456 Text en © 2020 The Authors. Epilepsia Open published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International League Against Epilepsy This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non‐commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.
spellingShingle Preliminary Reports
Stecher, Ximena
Schonstedt, Valeria
Manterola, Carla
Carreño, Fernando
Zamorano, Francisco
Velasquez, Alvaro
Castillo, Mauricio
Morphometric analysis program: Detection of epileptic foci in young children using an adult normative database: Initial experience
title Morphometric analysis program: Detection of epileptic foci in young children using an adult normative database: Initial experience
title_full Morphometric analysis program: Detection of epileptic foci in young children using an adult normative database: Initial experience
title_fullStr Morphometric analysis program: Detection of epileptic foci in young children using an adult normative database: Initial experience
title_full_unstemmed Morphometric analysis program: Detection of epileptic foci in young children using an adult normative database: Initial experience
title_short Morphometric analysis program: Detection of epileptic foci in young children using an adult normative database: Initial experience
title_sort morphometric analysis program: detection of epileptic foci in young children using an adult normative database: initial experience
topic Preliminary Reports
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7918321/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33681667
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/epi4.12456
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