Abstract

Background: We hypothesized that right and left temporal lobe epilepsy (RTLE and LTLE, respectively) have distinctive spatial patterns of white matter (WM) changes that can be differentiated and interpreted with the use of multiple diffusion parameters. We compared the global microstructure of fiber bundles with regard to WM alterations in both RTLE and LTLE, addressing some of the methodological issues of previous studies.Methods: Diffusion tensor imaging data from 17 patients with RTLE (age: 40.7 ± 10.4), 15 patients with LTLE (age: 37.3 ± 10.4), and 15 controls (age: 34.8 ± 11.2) were used in the study. WM integrity was quantified by fractional anisotropy (FA), mean diffusivity (MD), longitudinal diffusivity (LD), and radial diffusivity (RD). The diffusion parameters were compared between the groups in tracts representing the core of the fiber bundles. The volumes of hippocampi and amygdala were subsequently compared across the groups, while the data were adjusted for the effect of hippocampal sclerosis.Results: Significantly reduced FA and increased MD, LD, and RD were found bilaterally over widespread brain regions in RTLE. An increase in MD and RD values was observed in widespread WM fiber bundles ipsilaterally in LTLE, largely overlapping with regions where FA was lower, while no increase in LD was observed. We also found a difference between the LTLE and RTLE groups for the right hippocampal volume (with and without adjustment for HS), whereas no significant volume differences were found between patients and controls.Conclusions: It appears that patients with RTLE exhibit a more widespread pattern of WM alterations that extend far beyond the temporal lobe in both ipsilateral and contralateral hemisphere; furthermore, these changes seem to reflect more severe damage related to chronic degeneration. Conversely, more restrained changes in the LTLE may imply a pattern of less severe axonal damage, more restricted to ipsilateral hemisphere. Comprehensive finding of more prominent hippocampal atrophy in the RTLE raises an interesting issue of seizure-induced implications on gray matter and WM microstructure that may not necessarily mean a straightforward causal relationship. Further correlations of diffusion-derived metrics with neuropsychological and functional imaging measures may provide complementary information on underlying WM abnormalities with regard to functional hemispheric specialization.

Highlights

  • Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) is the most prevalent type of focal epilepsy

  • Our results are broadly consistent with studies confirming that patients with TLE suffer from dysfunctions affecting large-scale brain networks rather than a single focal region

  • Our study implies that right and left TLE have different distinctive spatial patterns of white matter (WM) microstructural abnormalities that can be differentiated and interpreted with the use of multiple diffusion metrics

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Summary

Introduction

Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) is the most prevalent type of focal epilepsy. Whereas, neuronal loss and gliosis in hippocampus [hippocampal sclerosis (HS)] is the most common underlying pathological finding in TLE [1], widespread gray matter abnormalities are frequently reported, including further mesiotemporal changes that extend to the parahippocampus and entorhinal cortex [2], amygdala [3], thalamus, and multiple cortical regions. It has been shown that WM changes associated with TLE are not restricted to the affected medial temporal lobe and involve a larger epileptogenic network [5, 6], reflecting underlying seizure-related WM alterations. Tract-Based Spatial Statistics (TBSS) is an automated method that allows for performing multi-subject statistical testing of diffusion-related parameters; misalignment issues are solved with restricting analysis to the core of fiber bundles, represented by the local maxima of FA [11]. We hypothesized that right and left temporal lobe epilepsy (RTLE and LTLE, respectively) have distinctive spatial patterns of white matter (WM) changes that can be differentiated and interpreted with the use of multiple diffusion parameters. We compared the global microstructure of fiber bundles with regard to WM alterations in both RTLE and LTLE, addressing some of the methodological issues of previous studies

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