• Frontiers in neurology · Jan 2014

    Review

    Mapping epileptic activity: sources or networks for the clinicians?

    • Francesca Pittau, Pierre Mégevand, Laurent Sheybani, Eugenio Abela, Frédéric Grouiller, Laurent Spinelli, Christoph M Michel, Margitta Seeck, and Serge Vulliemoz.
    • EEG and Epilepsy Unit, Neurology Department, University Hospitals and Faculty of Medicine of Geneva , Geneva , Switzerland.
    • Front Neurol. 2014 Jan 1;5:218.

    AbstractEpileptic seizures of focal origin are classically considered to arise from a focal epileptogenic zone and then spread to other brain regions. This is a key concept for semiological electro-clinical correlations, localization of relevant structural lesions, and selection of patients for epilepsy surgery. Recent development in neuro-imaging and electro-physiology and combinations, thereof, have been validated as contributory tools for focus localization. In parallel, these techniques have revealed that widespread networks of brain regions, rather than a single epileptogenic region, are implicated in focal epileptic activity. Sophisticated multimodal imaging and analysis strategies of brain connectivity patterns have been developed to characterize the spatio-temporal relationships within these networks by combining the strength of both techniques to optimize spatial and temporal resolution with whole-brain coverage and directional connectivity. In this paper, we review the potential clinical contribution of these functional mapping techniques as well as invasive electrophysiology in human beings and animal models for characterizing network connectivity.

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