Unilateral focal preponderance of interictal epileptiform discharges as a predictor of seizure origin
M. D. Holmes, C. B. Dodrill, A. J. Wilensky, L. M. Ojemann and G. A. Ojemann
Department of Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, USA.
OBJECTIVE: To test the hypothesis that seizure origin may be predicted from
scalp-recorded electroencephalographic interictal epileptiform patterns
that occur exclusively or preponderantly over a single focal region.
PATIENTS AND METHODS: Fifty-nine of 98 patients (>=16 years old) with
intractable epilepsy who underwent sphenoidal/scalp electroencephalographic
video monitoring were identified as having interictal epileptiform
discharges preponderantly (>=75% of all discharges) or exclusively over
a single unilateral region (basal-temporal, midposterior temporal,
frontopolar, superior frontal, central). Ictal recordings in 48 patients
could be interpreted as demonstrating focal origins, and the ictal findings
were compared with the interictal findings. Eleven patients had
uninterpretable ictal recordings or no seizures during monitoring and were
not further considered. RESULTS: All seizures arose from the expected
region in 39 of the 48 patients (Fisher's exact test, P<.001).
Interictal discharges occurred exclusively over a single region in 23 of
the 48 patients, and all seizures arose from the expected region in 22 of
the 23 patients (P<.001). Seventeen patients among this group of 23 had
exclusively unilateral basal-temporal discharges, and all seizures arose
from the expected side, with the exception of one seizure that arose from
the opposite side in one patient, with her other seizure arising from the
expected side (P<.001). All seizures arose from the expected region in
three patients who exhibited all interictal discharges arising from a
single superior frontal region, in two patients with discharges only over a
single midposterior temporal region, and in one patient with exclusively
unilateral frontopolar discharges. CONCLUSIONS: Interictal discharges that
demonstrate a consistent unilateral focal preponderance over a single
region, regardless of location, generally predict seizure origin. If the
discharges are exclusive to a single region, there is a greater than 95%
probability that all recorded seizures will originate from the expected
region.