Kawamura M, Murase K, Yasuhara Y, Mogami H, Tanada S, Hamamoto K, Hatakeyama T, Kimura H, Sakaki S
Nihon Igaku Hoshasen Gakkai Zasshi. 1989 Feb 25;49(2):199-205.
Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) was performed 30 minutes and 4 hours after injection of 111 MBq (3 mCi) N-isopropyl-p-(123I) iodoamphetamine (IMP) which was injected 5 minutes after the completion of intravenous bemegride loading. A 31-year-old female with simple partial seizures evolving to complex partial seizures evolving to generalized tonic-clonic convulsive seizures with a history of hospitalization, suffering from low-grade fever, generalized convulsive seizures, and impaired consciousness at the age of 27 years was studied. Angiographic examinations, X-CT, MRI, CSF examinations, and interictal neurological examinations were normal. She suffered from clonic convulsions in her right shoulder and arm, and hallucinations and dysmnesia which were characteristic of temporal lobe epilepsy. More recently she suffered from impaired consciousness once or twice a month. While the controlled IMP-SPECT study was normal, the IMP-SPECT study examined after the activation by intravenous bemegride loading showed the pattern of a regional increased uptake of IMP in the epileptic lesions corresponding with the epileptic symptoms, and a surrounding border of decreased uptake which might be the inhibition of surrounding neuronal activity and metabolism. In conclusion, the bemegride loading IMP-SPECT study could be a potential diagnostic method in patients with seizures whose epileptic lesions were not determined by the conventional methods or in whom the surgical interventions were considered, by reason of its capability to demonstrate positively the epileptic lesions.