Abstract

Of 166 consecutive patients studied with depth electroencephalography (EEG), 87 had seizures arising from one temporal lobe and 23 had seizures arising independently from each temporal lobe. We retrospectively reviewed and compared those patients with unitemporal and those with bitemporal seizures. There was no statistically significant differences between the two groups in terms of age at onset of seizures, duration of epilepsy, localization of scalp EEG abnormalities, surgical results, or pathological findings. The bitemporal group, however, had significantly fewer patients with a history of febrile seizures (p less than 0.025). Two patients with bitemporal seizures were later found to have extratemporal lesions, and one an extrahippocampal temporal lesion, on magnetic resonance scans; one patient's extratemporal lesion was resected and all habitual seizures stopped. These findings suggest that a single pathophysiological process accounts for unitemporal and some bitemporal epilepsy, but that independent onset of seizures from each temporal lobe detected by depth EEG may also indicate extratemporal foci.

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