Presurgical electromagnetic functional brain mapping in refractory focal epilepsy
Fecha
2018Autor
Coolen, Tim
Dumitrescu, Alexandru M.
Bourguignon, Mathieu
Wens, Vincent
Urbain, Charline
De Tiège, Xavier
Metadatos
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Coolen, T., Dumitrescu, A.M., Bourguignon, M. et al. Z. Epileptol. (2018) 31: 203. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10309-018-0189-7
Resumen
Background. Electroencephalography
(EEG) and magnetoencephalography (MEG)
are neurophysiological methods used
to investigate noninvasively the spatial,
temporal, and spectral dynamics of human
brain functions.
Objectives. This article reviews data on the
use of EEG and MEG for presurgical functional
brainmapping in patients with refractory focal
epilepsy. The focus is on the localization of the
primary sensorimotor (SM1) cortex as well as
the verbal language and episodic memory
functions.
Material andmethods. The English literature
was reviewed based on a PubMed search.
Relevant references in the selected papers
were also included.
Results. Presurgical MEG functional
localization of the SM1 cortex generally
overlaps with intracranial mapping. MEG
allows for determination of hemispheric
verbal (receptive and expressive) language
dominance in neurosurgical patients with
a high degree of concordance with the
intracarotid amobarbital test. MEG represents
an interesting technique for assessing
postoperativememory outcome in patients
withmesial temporal lobe epilepsy. Very few
studies have evaluated the yield of EEG in
these three clinical indications. High-density
EEG might be a promising technique that
needs further validation.
Conclusion. MEG is a validated and robust
technique for noninvasive functionalmapping
of the SM1 cortex and verbal language
hemispheric dominance in patients with
refractory focal epilepsy. Current data also
suggest that MEG is a promising technique
for assessing the hemispheric dominance of
memory function. Further studies are needed
to assess the clinical added value of highdensity
EEG in these clinical indications.