Liu Rebecca S N, Lemieux Louis, Bell Gail S, Sisodiya Sanjay M, Bartlett Philippa A, Shorvon Simon D, Sander Josemir W A S, Duncan John S
The Department of Clinical and Experimental Epilepsy, Institute of Neurology, University College London, London, England.
Epilepsia. 2005 Sep;46(9):1482-94. doi: 10.1111/j.1528-1167.2005.51603.x.
Whether cerebral damage results from epileptic seizures remains a contentious issue. We report on the first longitudinal community-based quantitative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) study to investigate the effect of seizures on the hippocampus, cerebellum, and neocortex.
One hundred seventy-nine patients with epilepsy (66 temporal lobe epilepsy, 51 extratemporal partial epilepsy, and 62 generalized epilepsy) and 90 control subjects underwent two MRI brain scans 3.5 years apart. Automated and manual measurement techniques identified changes in global and regional brain volumes and hippocampal T2 relaxation times.
Baseline hippocampal volumes were significantly reduced in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy and could be attributed to an antecedent neurologic insult. Rates of hippocampal, cerebral, and cerebellar atrophy were not syndrome specific and were similar in control and patient groups. Global and regional brain atrophy was determined primarily by age. A prior neurologic insult was associated with reduced hippocampal and cerebellar volumes and an increased rate of cerebellar atrophy. Significant atrophy of the hippocampus, neocortex, or cerebellum occurred in 17% of patients compared with 6.7% of control subjects. Patients with and without significant volume reduction were comparable in terms of seizure frequency, antiepileptic drug (AED) use, and epilepsy duration, with no identifiable risk factors for the development of atrophy.
Overt structural cerebral damage is not an inevitable consequence of epileptic seizures. In general, brain volume reduction in epilepsy is the cumulative effect of an initial precipitating injury and age-related cerebral atrophy. Significant atrophy developed in individual patients, particularly those with temporal lobe and generalized epilepsy. Longer periods of observation may detect more subtle effects of seizures.
癫痫发作是否会导致脑损伤仍是一个有争议的问题。我们报告了第一项基于社区的纵向定量磁共振成像(MRI)研究,以调查癫痫发作对海马体、小脑和新皮层的影响。
179例癫痫患者(66例颞叶癫痫、51例颞叶外局灶性癫痫和62例全身性癫痫)和90名对照者在3.5年的时间里接受了两次脑部MRI扫描。自动和手动测量技术确定了全脑和局部脑容量以及海马体T2弛豫时间的变化。
颞叶癫痫患者的基线海马体体积显著减小,这可能归因于先前的神经损伤。海马体、大脑和小脑的萎缩率并非特定于癫痫综合征,在对照组和患者组中相似。全脑和局部脑萎缩主要由年龄决定。先前的神经损伤与海马体和小脑体积减小以及小脑萎缩率增加有关。与6.7%的对照者相比,17%的患者出现了海马体、新皮层或小脑的显著萎缩。有和没有显著体积减小的患者在癫痫发作频率、抗癫痫药物(AED)使用情况和癫痫病程方面相当,没有可识别的萎缩发展风险因素。
明显的结构性脑损伤并非癫痫发作的必然结果。一般来说,癫痫中的脑容量减小是初始促发损伤和年龄相关脑萎缩的累积效应。个别患者出现了显著萎缩,特别是那些患有颞叶癫痫和全身性癫痫的患者。更长时间的观察可能会发现癫痫发作更细微的影响。