Journal article

Temporal lobe epilepsy with a contralateral parietal seizure-onset zone

Pages 787 to 792

Cite this article


  • AlGaeed, M.,
  • Javan, R.,
  • Shields, D.-C.,
  • Gholipour, T.
  • and Koubeissi, M.
(2021). Temporal Lobe Epilepsy With a Contralateral Parietal Seizure-Onset Zone. Epileptic Disorders, 23(5), 787-792. https://doi.org/10.1684/epd.2021.1310.

  • AlGaeed, Mohanad.,
  • et al.
« Temporal lobe epilepsy with a contralateral parietal seizure-onset zone ». Epileptic Disorders, 2021/5 Vol 23, 2021. p.787-792. CAIRN.INFO, stm.cairn.info/revue-epileptic-disorders-2021-5-page-787?lang=en.

  • ALGAEED, Mohanad,
  • JAVAN, Ramin,
  • SHIELDS, Donald C.,
  • GHOLIPOUR, Taha
  • and KOUBEISSI, Mohamad,
2021. Temporal lobe epilepsy with a contralateral parietal seizure-onset zone. Epileptic Disorders, 2021/5 Vol 23, p.787-792. DOI : 10.1684/epd.2021.1310. URL : https://stm.cairn.info/revue-epileptic-disorders-2021-5-page-787?lang=en.

https://doi.org/10.1684/epd.2021.1310


English

Abstract

Achieving sustained seizure freedom following epilepsy surgery remains a challenge in some patients. Lesional temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE), for example, in patients with mesial temporal sclerosis or other MRI abnormalities, carries a good prognosis for seizure freedom compared to significantly lower chances of seizure freedom in patients with non-lesional epilepsy. However, even in some lesional TLE cases, persistent post-operative seizures suggest seizure onset from a brain region that is clinically and electrographically silent but manifests only after propagation to the temporal lobe. A notable example of such a brain region is the parietal lobe, which has extensive connectivity to various brain regions. While certain seizure semiologies, for example, sensory seizures, suggest parietal lobe onset, some medial parietal seizures may be semiologically indistinguishable from temporal lobe seizures. Here, we report a patient with focal impaired awareness seizures that manifested semiologically and electrographically as left TLE but proved to originate from the contralateral medial parietal lobe. We discuss putative seizure propagation pathways.

Key words

  • SEEG
  • TLE
  • MTS
  • parietal lobe
  • seizure propagation

Publisher keywords: MTS, parietal lobe, SEEG, seizure propagation, TLE