Seizure Imaging: Surgery for Medically Intractable Epilepsy

Transcription

Seizure Imaging: Surgery for Medically Intractable Epilepsy
Seizure Imaging:
Surgery for Medically Intractable Epilepsy
Unni Udayasankar MD
Assistant Professor
Cleveland Clinic Children’s Hospital
Objectives
• Common indications and
rationale for pediatric epilepsy
surgery
• Review the role of imaging in
preoperative assessment
• Understand the major types of
epilepsy surgery performed
• Radiopathological correlation in
surgical causes of epilepsy
Identifying Surgical Candidates
•
Medical intractability in Epilepsy:
– Two appropriately chosen, well-tolerated first line antiepileptic drug
regimens have failed due to lack of efficacy.
– Where the minimum seizure free period is one year or 3 times the
pretreatment inter-seizure interval, whichever is longer.
•
Surgical candidacy to be determined on a case by case basis using data
from an extensive multimodality assessment.
•
Plasticity phenomenon: Early surgical intervention can maximize efficacy,
recovery, and cognitive potential.
*Kwan P, Arzimanoglou A, Berg ST, et al. Definition of drug resistant epilepsy. Consensus proposal by the ad hoc Task Force of the ILAE
Commission on Theraputic Strategies. Epilepsia. 2010; 51:1069-77.
Key Considerations for Surgery
 Is a structural lesion
identified? (MRI)
 Is an epileptogenic zone
identified? (EEG, functional imaging)
 Are the lesion and
epileptogenic zone
concordant?
 Location?
Relationship to eloquent
cortex? (MR landmarks, functional imaging)
 Focal or extensive?
Single or multiple?
Unilateral or bilateral?
Presurgical
Assessment Modalities
EEG
Subdural grid
MRI
PET/SPECT
MEG
DTI/Tractography
fMRI
Invasive electrodes
fMRI
Motor
Rhyming
Passive Listening
Word
generation
Nuclear Medicine Studies
•
Interictal Positron Emission
Tomography (PET)
•
Ictal Single Photon Emission
Computed Tomography (SPECT)
•
Identify eloquent cortex to be
spared
•
Identify or confirm ictal focus
•
Identify pathophysiology of partial
and generalized seizures
•
ictal hypermetabollism will be
seen not only in the source lesion,
but in any cortex to which the
seizure has spread
Common Types of Epilepsy Surgery
Goals of surgery:
– To resect the epileptogenic zone, OR
– To disconnect avenues of seizure spread
Types of surgery
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
Lesionectomy
Temporal Lobectomy
Hemispherectomy
Corpus Callosotomy
Multiple Subpial Transections
Radiosurgery
Vagal nerve stimulators
Lesionectomy
Focal Cortical Dysplasia
• Most common cause
• Types
– FCD Type I (non-Taylor)
– FCD Type II (Taylor)
• Two variants
– Hemimegalencephaly
– Tuberous sclerosis
A and B
FCD
FCD Taylor Type IIB
with balloon cells
FCD: Lesionectomy
FCD: Taylor Type II
Multifocal lesionectomy
Tuberous
sclerosis
MCD
Lesionectomy: Tumors
• Almost all originate from cerebral cortex
• Mixture of glial and neural elements
• Benign biological behavior
• Low mitotic activity
• Stable or slow growing
• Associated with cortical dysplasia or dysplastic neuronal
elements
Ganglioglioma
PXA
PXA
DNET
Oligodendroglioma
Pilomyxoid
Astrocytoma
(PMA)
Angiocentric glioma
Atypical
Meningioma
Lesionectomy: Cavernous malformation
Lesionectomy: Scar
Lesionectomy: Post herpetic encephalomalacia
Temporal Lobectomy
•
Intractable temporal lobe lesion
–
Malformations of cortical development
–
Neoplasm
–
Mesial Temporal Sclerosis (MTS)
–
Vascular anomalies
Temporal Lobectomy
Selective Amygdalohippocampectomy
“Standard” Anterior Temporal Lobectomy
Temporal Lobectomy
Temporal Lobectomy
Selective Amygdalohippocampectomy
In selective amygdalohippocampectomy, goal is
to preserve remaining temporal lobe. Access to
mesial structures is challenging; approaches
include trans-Sylvian, lateral trans-cortical,
subtemporal, and variations.
Temporal Lobectomy: MCD
Temporal Lobectomy: Ganglioglioma
Temporal
Lobectomy:
Oligodendroglioma
Cavernous Malformation
Right temporal AVM
Extended Lesionectomy/Lobectomy
Aicardi syndrome
Cystic Encephalomalacia
Sturge Weber Syndrome
Sturge Weber Syndrome
Sturge-Weber
Syndrome
Grade II
Oligoastrocytoma
Polymicrogyria
Schizencephaly
Old non-accidental
injury
Hemispherectomy
•
Typical Indications: Secondary generalized seizures where focus is large or multifocal
involving only one hemisphere.
–
–
–
–
–
•
Rasmussens Encephalitis
Ishemic or traumatic injury
Sturge Weber
Hemimegencephly
Diffuse (unilateral) migration disorder
Two main techniques share goal of rendering
disordered hemisphere behaviorly non-functional.
1. Anatomic Hemispherectomy – Remove
involved hemisphere, leaving only deep
structures.
2. Functional Hemispherectomy – Disconnect
white matter tracts with more limited
resection.
Anatomic Hemispherectomy
• When anatomic
hemispherectomy is
considered, the epileptogenic
hemisphere is usually
severely dysfunctional
– Hemiparesis
– Language mediated by the
contralateral hemisphere
• Therefore extensive resection
may be justified.
• Frontal, parietal, occipital and
temporal lobes are removed,
leaving the basal ganglia,
thalamus, and brainstem.
Anatomic Hemispherectomy: Large MCD
Hemimegalencephaly
Hemimegalencephaly
Anatomic Hemispherectomy: Chronic Post
surgical changes
Functional Hemispherectomy
•
A “window” of cortex may be
removed to then make the
appropriate white matter
transections.
•
White matter tracts that are
disconnected
–
–
–
–
–
Corpus Callosum
Coronal radiata/internal capsule
Fornix
Anterior Commisure
Outflow tracts of the amygdala
Functional Hemispherectomy
Rassmussen’s encephalitis
Rassmussen’s
Encephalitis
Cystic encephalomalacia , functional hemispherectomy
Functional Hemispherectomy
.
Corpus Callosotomy
•
Typical Indications:
–
Intractable seizures
without resectable focus
or when only incomplete
resection is possible
–
Patients may have
multiple epileptogenic
zones
–
Drop attacks
Corpus Callosotomy
Multiple Subpial Transections
•
Typical Indications:
Epileptogenic
zone in dominant
eloquent cortex
•
A “disconnection”
type procedure to
avoid resecting
eloquent structures:
Hypothalamic
Hamartoma
Epilepsy Surgeries Summary
Surgical Objectives
Technique
Candidates
Example lesions
Lesionectomy
Discrete resectable
lesions (usually noneloquent cortex)
•Neoplasm
•Vascular
•Focal MOCD
•Encephalomalacia
Temporal
Lobectomy
Lesions isolated to
temporal lobe
•Any of above
involving temporal
lobe, including MTS
Extensive or multifocal
unilateral epileptogenic
foci
•Sturge-Weber
•Rasmussen’s
Encephalitis
•Hemimegancephaly
Extensive or multifocal
bilateral epileptogenic
foci or no resectable
focus
•Extensive MOCD
•Lesion of dominant
eloquent cortex
Resection:
Remove the
epileptogenic focus
Anatomic
Hemispherectomy
Disconnection:
Interrupt cortical
connections to limit
seizure spread
Functional
Hemispherectomy
Corpus
Callosotomy
Multiple Subpial Epileptogenic foci in
eloquent cortex
Transections
•Lesion of dominant
eloquent cortex