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Narrative review of epilepsy: getting the most out of your neuroimaging

Journal

TRANSLATIONAL PEDIATRICS
Volume 10, Issue 4, Pages 1078-1099

Publisher

AME PUBL CO
DOI: 10.21037/tp-20-261

Keywords

Central nervous system diseases; epilepsy; pre-surgical planning

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Neuroimaging plays a crucial role in evaluating pediatric epilepsy, with recent advancements in MRI technology improving lesion detection accuracy. Functional MRI and diffusion tensor imaging help in localizing epileptic foci.
Neuroimaging represents an important step in the evaluation of pediatric epilepsy. The crucial role of brain imaging in the diagnosis, follow-up and presurgical assessment of patients with epilepsy is noted and has to be familiar to all neuroradiologists and trainees approaching pediatric brain imaging. Morphological qualitative imaging shows the majority of cerebral lesions/alterations underlying focal epilepsy and can highlight some features which are useful in the differential diagnosis of the different types of epilepsy. Recent advances in MRI acquisitions including diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI), post-acquisition image processing techniques, and quantification of imaging data are increasing the accuracy of lesion detection during the last decades. Functional MRI (fMRI) can be really useful and helps to identify cortical eloquent areas that are essential for language, motor function, and memory, and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) can reveal white matter tracts that are vital for these functions, thus reducing the risk of epilepsy surgery causing new morbidities. Also positron emission tomography (PET), single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), simultaneous electroencephalogram (EEG) and fMRI, and electrical and magnetic source imaging can be used to assess the exact localization of epileptic foci and help in the design of intracranial EEG recording strategies. The main role of these hybrid techniques is to obtain quantitative and qualitative informations, a necessary step to evaluate and demonstrate the complex relationship between abnormal structural and functional data and to manage a patient-tailored surgical approach in epileptic patients.

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