Ryvlin P, Bouvard S, Le Bars D, De Lamérie G, Grégoire M C, Kahane P, Froment J C, Mauguière F
Epilepsy Surgery Unit, and CERMEP, Neurological Hospital, Lyon, France.
Brain. 1998 Nov;121 ( Pt 11):2067-81. doi: 10.1093/brain/121.11.2067.
We assessed the clinical utility of [11C]flumazenil-PET (FMZ-PET) prospectively in 100 epileptic patients undergoing a pre-surgical evaluation, and defined the specific contribution of this neuro-imaging technique with respect to those of MRI and [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose-PET (FDG-PET). All patients benefited from a long term video-EEG monitoring, whereas an intracranial EEG investigation was performed in 40 cases. Most of our patients (73%) demonstrated a FMZ-PET abnormality; this hit rate was significantly higher in temporal lobe epilepsy (94%) than in other types of epilepsy (50%) (P < 0.001). Most FMZ-PET findings coexisted with a MRI abnormality (81%), including hippocampal atrophy (35%) and focal hypometabolism on FDG-PET (89%). The area of decreased FMZ binding was often smaller than that of glucose hypometabolism (48%) or larger than that of the MRI abnormality (28%). FMZ-PET did not prove superior to FDG-PET in assessing the extent of the ictal onset zone, as defined by intracranial EEG recordings. However, it provided useful data which were complementary to those of MRI and FDG-PET in three situations: (i) in temporal lobe epilepsy associated with MRI signs of hippocampal sclerosis, FMZ-PET abnormalities delineated the site of seizure onset precisely, whenever they were coextensive with FDG-PET abnormalities; (ii) in bi-temporal epilepsy, FMZ-PET helped to confirm the bilateral origin of seizures by showing a specific pattern of decreased FMZ binding in both temporal lobes in 33% of cases; (iii) in patients with a unilateral cryptogenic frontal lobe epilepsy, FMZ-PET provided further evidence of the side and site of seizure onset in 55% of cases. Thus, FMZ-PET deserves to be included in the pre-surgical evaluation of these specific categories of epileptic patients, representing approximately half of the population considered for epilepsy surgery.
我们前瞻性地评估了[11C]氟马西尼正电子发射断层扫描(FMZ-PET)在100例接受术前评估的癫痫患者中的临床应用,并确定了这种神经成像技术相对于磁共振成像(MRI)和[18F]氟脱氧葡萄糖正电子发射断层扫描(FDG-PET)的具体贡献。所有患者均受益于长期视频脑电图监测,其中40例进行了颅内脑电图检查。我们的大多数患者(73%)表现出FMZ-PET异常;颞叶癫痫患者的这一命中率(94%)显著高于其他类型癫痫患者(50%)(P<0.001)。大多数FMZ-PET检查结果与MRI异常(81%)并存,包括海马萎缩(35%)和FDG-PET上的局灶性代谢减低(89%)。FMZ结合减低区域通常小于葡萄糖代谢减低区域(48%)或大于MRI异常区域(28%)。在评估由颅内脑电图记录定义的发作起始区范围方面,FMZ-PET并未证明优于FDG-PET。然而,在三种情况下,它提供了与MRI和FDG-PET互补的有用数据:(i)在伴有海马硬化MRI征象的颞叶癫痫中,只要FMZ-PET异常与FDG-PET异常范围一致,FMZ-PET异常就能精确勾勒出发作起始部位;(ii)在双侧颞叶癫痫中,FMZ-PET通过在33%的病例中显示双侧颞叶FMZ结合减低的特定模式,有助于确认癫痫发作的双侧起源;(iii)在单侧隐源性额叶癫痫患者中,FMZ-PET在55% 的病例中提供了癫痫发作起始侧别和部位的进一步证据。因此,FMZ-PET值得纳入这些特定类型癫痫患者的术前评估,这些患者约占考虑进行癫痫手术人群的一半。