Connelly A
Radiology and Physics Unit, Institute of Child Health, London, UK.
Magn Reson Imaging. 1995;13(8):1233-7. doi: 10.1016/0730-725x(95)02037-t.
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can now provide maps of human brain function with high spatial and temporal resolution. This noninvasive technique can also map the cortical activation that occurs during focal seizures, as demonstrated here by the results obtained using a conventional 1.5 T clinical MRI system for the investigation of a 4-year-old boy suffering from frequent partial motor seizures of his right side. FLASH images (TE = 60 ms) were acquired every 10 s over a period of 25 min, and activation images derived by subtracting baseline images from images obtained during clinical seizures. Functional MRI revealed sequential activation associated with specific gyri within the left hemisphere with each of five consecutive clinical seizures, and also during a period that was not associated with detectable clinical seizure. The activated regions included gyri that were structurally abnormal. These results demonstrate (a) that functional MRI can potentially provide new insights into the dynamic events that occur in the epileptic brain and their relationship to brain structure; and (b) that there is the possibility of obtaining similar information in the absence of clinical seizures, suggesting the potential for studies in patients were interictal electrical disturbances.