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PET imaging in extratemporal epilepsy requires consideration of electroclinical findings.

Epilepsy Research 2016 September
OBJECTIVE: The study aimed to assess the relevance of interictal temporal glucose hypometabolism in patients with extratemporal epilepsy (ETE) by analyzing its association with a seizure semiology suggestive for temporal seizure involvement and the presence of temporal interictal epileptiform discharges (IEDs).

METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed the database of our epilepsy monitoring unit for patients with ETE, in whom long-term EEG-video-monitoring and [(18)F] fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) had been performed. The localization of IEDs and the glucose hypometabolism were compared.

RESULTS: Almost half (46%) of the 63 ETE patients had IEDs localized in the temporal lobe. Most patients (87.5%; 7/8) with temporal IEDs and an ipsitemporal hypometabolism showed seizure semiology suggestive of temporal or limbic system involvement in contrast to only 31.0% (9/29, p=0.01) in patients without temporal IEDs nor temporal hypometabolism. Those patients also showed an ictal seizure pattern spread into the ipsitemporal lobe, compared with 75.9% (22/29, n.s.) in patients without temporal IEDs nor temporal hypometabolism. Both, extratemporal (ipsilateral in 82.1%; 23/28 patients) and temporal (ipsilateral in 78.6%; 11/14 patients) hypometabolism significantly (p<0.05) lateralized to the epileptogenic hemisphere.

CONCLUSION: The common temporal glucose hypometabolism in ETE patients reflects a remote epileptic dysfunction arising from extratemporal epileptogenic zones. Thus, interpretation of interictal FDG-PET results requires consideration of EEG results and seizure semiology to avoid false localization particularly in non-lesional epilepsy.

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