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Authors
Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Clinically childhood occipital lobe epilepsy
(OLE) manifests itself with distinct syndromes. The traditional EEG recordings have not been able to overcome the difficulty
in correlating the ictal clinical symptoms to the onset in particular areas of the occipital lobes. To understand these syndromes it is important to map with more precision the epileptogenic cortical regions in OLE. Experimentally, we studied
three idiopathic childhood OLE patients with EEG source analysis and with the simultaneous acquisition of EEG and
fMRI, to map the BOLD effect associated with EEG spikes. The spatial overlap between the EEG and BOLD results was not very good, but the fMRI suggested localizations more
consistent with the ictal clinical manifestations of each type of epileptic syndrome. Since our first results show that by associating the BOLD effect with interictal spikes the epileptogenic
areas are mapped to localizations different from those calculated from EEG sources and that by using different EEG/fMRI
processing methods our results differ to some extent, it is very important to compare the different methods of processing the
localization of activation and develop a good methodology for obtaining co-registration maps of high resolution EEG with
BOLD localizations.
Description
Keywords
EEG Imagem de Difusão por Ressonância Magnética Epilepsia HDE NEU PED
Citation
IFMBE. 2007; 16: 505-508