Abstract:
We measured local cerebral metabolic rate for glucose (ICMRGIc)
using positron emission tomography (PET) in six children with
Sturge-Weber syndrome (SWS) and in six neurologically asymptomatic
children with facial capillary hemangioma suggestive of SWS. Children
with advanced SWS showed markedly depressed ICMRGIc in the anatomically
affected cerebral hemisphere in a distribution that extended beyond the
abnormalities depicted on computed tomography scan. In two infants with
SWS and recent seizure onset, interictal PET revealed a paradoxical
pattern of increased ICMRGIc in the cerebral cortex of the anatomically
affected hemisphere. In one of these infants, ICMRGIc was also increased
in the contralateral cerebellum, suggesting activation of the
cortico-ponto-cerebellar circuitry. Subsequent PET (28 months later) in
this child revealed the typical ICMRGIc pattern seen in advanced SWS.
Further study of this transient ICMRGIc increase may be important in
disclosing the pathogenesis of unilateral cerebral degeneration in SWS.
In neurologically asymptomatic children with the facial stigmata of SWS
and in children with early SWS, PET provides a sensitive measure of the
extent and degree of cerebral metabolic impairment. Serial PET studies
in children with SWS can be used to assess disease progression and,
together with computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging, may be
useful in the selection of suitable candidates for cerebral
hemispherectomy or focal cortical resection