Interactive Transcript
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This is a CT scan of the head in
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a 16-year-old boy with seizures.
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And we can see some calcified nodules along
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the lateral margin of the lateral ventricles.
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A tiny speck here on the superolateral margin
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of the right lateral ventricle,
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and a slightly larger but still overall small
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lesion on the lateral margin of the posterior
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body of the left lateral ventricle.
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We see another tiny area of mineralization
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adjacent to the right caudothalamic groove,
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which is the lateral margin of the anterior
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body of the right lateral ventricle,
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adjacent to the level of the foramen of Monroe.
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MRI confirms a diagnosis of tuberous sclerosis complex.
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You can see areas of dysplasia
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in both cerebral hemispheres.
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We can see here in the left,
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approximately the junction of the left
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parietal and occipital lobes.
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You can see the left frontal lobe.
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You can see the left temporal lobe.
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Here's the lesion in the left temporal lobe.
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It's in the left inferior temporal gyrus.
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Overall,
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there's a relatively mild tuber burden,
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but this patient still had profound seizures
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that were debilitating.
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Historically, it was said that tuberous sclerosis complex was
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not a great candidate for epilepsy surgery.
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Because you had multiple lesions,
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you don't know which one to resect,
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and you can't resect them all.
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Well,
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that's where modern imaging and multimodality
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evaluation can really help.
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Working with the epileptologists,
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these two images are from what's called Ciscom
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subtraction SISCOM interictal SPECT imaging,
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co-registered with MRI. What does that mean?
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It means we give a nuclear medicine,
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radio tracer that localizes to areas
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of blood flow and metabolism.
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It is an agent that can cross the blood
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brain barrier, and you give it once.
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When a patient is interictal,
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they haven't seized in a while.
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And what generally happens is areas where
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seizures originate between seizures have
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slightly lower metabolism and slightly lower
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blood flow than the rest of the brain.
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Then what you try and do is you monitor
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the patient with continuous EEG,
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and you have a nuclear medicine technologist
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sitting at the bedside,
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ready to inject the tracer.
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When the patient seizes,
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they inject the medicine right away.
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During a seizure,
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the area of seizure onset is highly
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metabolically active.
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Because it's highly metabolically active,
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it has a lot of blood flow.
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The radio tracer then localizes to this area,
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more so than areas of the brain.
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Well, we now have it where, during a seizure,
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ICTYL injection is slightly more blood
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flow than the rest of the brain,
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and the interictal has less blood flow.
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Most of the rest of the brain should have
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approximately similar blood flow in
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the ICTYL and interictal states.
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So with complex mathematics
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and computer formulas,
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it's possible to co-register the ictal and
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interictal images and subtract them.
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And you preferentially identify areas
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where the seizures are coming from.
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And this gives us a hint that possibly the
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left temporal pole is an area where seizures
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might be coming from if we remember this
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patient had an area of dysplasia
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in the left temporal lobe,
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and we know that the seizures likely are
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coming from there because this also
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matches what the EEG says.
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So now,
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even though the patient has other
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areas of cortical dysplasia,
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we now have reasons to think that the left
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temporal lobe is going to be the predominant
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cause of the seizures.
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So this patient underwent a
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left temporal lobectomy.
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The left temporal lobectomy allowed the left
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temporal pole to be resected with, hopefully,
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the site of seizure onset.
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You can see here that
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as we go inferiorly,
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their resection went more further posteriorly.
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Why is that helpful? Well,
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we thought the temporal pole was where
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the seizures were coming from,
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and that was confirmed on intraoperative
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electrocorticography.
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But we felt that it was possible,
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while we were there,
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to get this area of dysplasia in that region,
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which possibly was either the cause of the
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seizures or there was a seizure
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circuit where it was involved,
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and therefore both were able to be resected.
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Well, why not just take off everything?
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Well,
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the goal of this was to preserve as
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much brain parenchyma as possible,
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because we don't know if the patient,
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years down the road,
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may need a second resection somewhere else.
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Additionally,
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this is the left hemisphere in
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a right-handed individual.
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And this bump right here is the transverse
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temporal gyrus, or Heschel's gyrus.
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This is the region where,
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in the left hemisphere,
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you typically have receptive language.
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And this patient,
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functional MRI confirmed a left hemispheric
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language lateralization.
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So by performing the resection
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at an angle like this,
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they were able to avoid the language cortices.
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So this patient has tuberous sclerosis complex.
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And while there are several areas
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of cortical dysplasia,
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EEG confirmed with Ciscom ICTYL
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interictal subtraction.
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SPECT co-registered with MRI confirmed that
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the left temporal was likely the culprit
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with a multimodality workout.
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Up in collaboration with the epileptologist.
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It allowed a resection that
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removed both the presumed site of seizure onset
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and the adjacent
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area of dysplasia,
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which was likely either the
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source or involved.
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And the patient had improved seizure control.
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