Abstract:
We have performed positron emission tomography (PET) with 2-deoxy-
2[18F]fluoro-D-glucose (FDG) in eight infants and children (aged 18 days
to 5 years) with medically refractory epilepsy of neonatal onset. It was
hypothesized that in at least some of these infants a surgical approach
(focal resection, cerebral hemispherectomy) might be of benefit in
achieving seizure control, and that PET might assist in surgical
selection. In three of the eight subjects, interictal PET revealed
unilateral diffuse hypometabolism; following cerebral hemispherectomy in
these three patients, all seizures ceased and there were no adverse
effects. In one child, ictal PET showed hypermetabolism in the left
frontal cortex, left striatum, and right cerebellum; a partial left
cerebral hemispherectomy guided by intraoperative electrocorticography
was performed, following which all seizures ceased. One infant had
relative hypermetabolism in the right temporal and occipital lobes,
right thalamus, and left frontal lobe on ictal PET, and EEG telemetry
revealed a right occipitotemporal epileptic focus; this infant died from
anesthetic complications following right occipitotemporal cortical
resection. Of the three unoperated patients, one is a potential
candidate for right frontal lobectomy, but the other two were not
considered to be surgical candidates due to bilateral epileptogenicity.
Neuropathologic correlation in our series revealed that PET is a
sensitive test capable of detecting cytoarchitectural disturbances
whereas CT and MRI failed in this regard. In addition, PET provides a
very unique and important assessment of the functional integrity of
brain regions outside the area of potential resection