Abstract

Electroclinical features in surgical candidates with epileptic spasms differ significantly from the other focal epilepsy phenotypes. EEG findings tend to be more diffuse and less localizing in children with epileptic spasms. These are illustrated with five case studies to highlight three different categories of findings on interictal and ictal EEG: lateralizing , nonlateralizing , and false lateralizing . Hemihypsarrhythmia on interictal EEG is the most striking lateralizing abnormality that occurs in a minority of surgical candidates. Persistent focal epileptiform discharges in one region or asymmetric physiologic rhythms decreased over the abnormal hemisphere may provide localization clues. Ictal EEG patterns are diffuse and nonlocalizing in over half of the patients. Ictal patterns are best expressed in the posterior head regions even in patients with epileptogenic zone in anterior regions. Semiologically, epileptic spasms tend to be symmetrical in majority of surgical candidates. Asymmetric spasms and coexisting focal seizures (concurrent or remote), when present, may provide localization findings. False lateralizing interictal or ictal EEG abnormalities, paradoxically higher over the healthier hemisphere, occur in the setting of large encephaloclastic/volume loss lesions. In these patients, the diffuse discharges are less expressed over the abnormal hemisphere with less cerebral tissue. Recognition of such false lateralizing findings is important to avoid excluding appropriate surgical candidates based on the EEG findings alone. Epileptogenic lesions are visible on brain MRI in majority of surgical candidates with epileptic spasms. Electroclinical findings are often concordant with the lesion, but discordant findings are not uncommon in children with epileptic spasms.

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