4.1 Article

Focal epilepsies: Update on diagnosis and classification

Journal

EPILEPTIC DISORDERS
Volume 25, Issue 1, Pages 1-17

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/epd2.20045

Keywords

education; electroencephalography; epilepsy; focal epilepsy; MRI; neuroimaging; neuropathology

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Correct diagnosis and classification of seizures and epilepsies are crucial to provide optimal care for epilepsy patients. Focal seizures are divided into focal aware, focal impaired awareness, and focal to bilateral tonic-clonic seizures. Focal epilepsies are common in both children and adults, with different causes and subgroups. Neuroimaging, neurophysiology, and neuropathology are important in the diagnostic evaluation of focal epilepsies.
Correctly diagnosing and classifying seizures and epilepsies is paramount to ensure the delivery of optimal care to patients with epilepsy. Focal seizures, defined as those that originate within networks limited to one hemisphere, are primarily subdivided into focal aware, focal impaired awareness, and focal to bilateral tonic-clonic seizures. Focal epilepsies account for most epilepsy cases both in children and adults. In children, focal epilepsies are typically subdivided in three groups: self-limited focal epilepsy syndromes (e.g., self-limited epilepsy with centrotemporal spikes), focal epilepsy of unknown cause but which do not meet criteria for a self-limited focal epilepsy syndrome, and focal epilepsy of known cause (e.g., structural lesions-developmental or acquired). In adults, focal epilepsies are often acquired and may be caused by a structural lesion such as stroke, infection and traumatic brain injury, or brain tumors, vascular malformations, metabolic disorders, autoimmune, and/or genetic causes. In addition to seizure semiology, neuroimaging, neurophysiology, and neuropathology constitute the cornerstones of a diagnostic evaluation. Patients with focal epilepsy who become drug-resistant should promptly undergo assessment in an epilepsy center. After excluding pseudo-resistance, these patients should be considered for presurgical evaluation as a means to identify the location and extent of the epileptogenic zone and assess their candidacy for a surgical procedure. The goal of this seminar in epileptology is to summarize clinically relevant information concerning focal epilepsies. This contributes to the ILAE's mission to ensure that worldwide healthcare professionals, patients, and caregivers continue to have access to high-quality educational resources concerning epilepsy.

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