Abstract

Focal cortical dysplasia (FCD) causes drug-resistant epilepsy in children that can be cured surgically, but the lesions are often unseen by imaging. To assess the efficiency of arterial spin labeling (ASL), voxel-based-morphometry (VBM), fMRI electroencephalography (EEG), resting-state regional homogeneity (ReHo), 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) positron emission tomography (PET), and their combination in detecting pediatric FCD. We prospectively included 10 children for whom FCD was localized by surgical resection. They underwent 3T MR acquisition with concurrent EEG, including ASL perfusion, resting-state BOLD fMRI (allowing the processing of EEG-fMRI and ReHo), 3D T1-weighted images processed using VBM, and FDG PET-CT coregistered with MRI. Detection was assessed visually and by comparison with healthy controls (for ASL and VBM). Eight children had normal MRI, and 2 had asymmetric sulci. Using MR techniques, FCD was accurately detected by ASL for 6/10, VBM for 5/10, EEG-fMRI for 5/8 (excluding 2 with uninterpretable results), and ReHo for 4/10 patients. The combination of ASL, VBM, and ReHo allowed correct FCD detection for 9/10 patients. FDG PET alone showed higher accuracy than the other techniques (7/9), and its combination with VBM allowed correct FCD detection for 8/9 patients. The detection efficiency was better for patients with asymmetric sulci (2/2 for all techniques), but advanced MR techniques and PET were useful for MR-negative patients (7/8). A combination of multiple imaging techniques, including PET, ASL, and VBM analysis of T1-weighted images, is effective in detecting subtle FCD in children.

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