4.6 Article

Neuroimaging gradient alterations and epileptogenic prediction in focal cortical dysplasia IIIa

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEURAL ENGINEERING
Volume 19, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1741-2552/ac6628

Keywords

focal cortical dysplasia IIIa; gradient; SEEG; epileptogenicity prediction; surgery cavity

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [82071457]
  2. National Key R&D Program of China [2021YFC2401201]
  3. Capital's Funds for Health Improvement and Research [2022-1-1071, 2020-2-1076]

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This study investigated the neuroimaging gradient alterations and epileptogenicity of FCD IIIa, along with their potential values in guiding suitable resection range and predicting postoperative seizure outcomes. The conclusions from this study may facilitate an accurate presurgical examination of FCD IIIa. However, further investigation including a larger cohort is necessary to confirm the results.
Objective. Focal cortical dysplasia type IIIa (FCD IIIa) is a highly prevalent temporal lobe epilepsy but the seizure outcomes are not satisfactory after epilepsy surgery. Hence, quantitative neuroimaging, epileptogenic alterations, as well as their values in guiding surgery are worth exploring. Approach. We examined 69 patients with pathologically verified FCD IIIa using multimodal neuroimaging and stereoelectroencephalography (SEEG). Among them, 18 received postoperative imaging which showed the extent of surgical resection and 9 underwent SEEG implantation. We also explored neuroimaging gradient alterations along with the distance to the temporal pole. Subsequently, the machine learning regression model was employed to predict whole-brain epileptogenicity. Lastly, the correlation between neuroimaging or epileptogenicity and surgical cavities was assessed. Main results. FCD IIIa displayed neuroimaging gradient alterations on the temporal neocortex, morphology-signal intensity decoupling, low similarity of intra-morphological features and high similarity of intra-signal intensity features. The support vector regression model was successfully applied at the whole-brain level to calculate the continuous epileptogenic value at each vertex (mean-squared error = 13.8 +/- 9.8). Significance. Our study investigated the neuroimaging gradient alterations and epileptogenicity of FCD IIIa, along with their potential values in guiding suitable resection range and in predicting postoperative seizure outcomes. The conclusions from this study may facilitate an accurate presurgical examination of FCD IIIa. However, further investigation including a larger cohort is necessary to confirm the results.

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