Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3051786 Epilepsy & Behavior Case Reports 2016 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

•A childhood absence epilepsy case with single hemispheric involvement is described.•Thalamic GABA/Cr ratio of affected versus reference hemisphere was increased to 2.57.•A similar ratio between occipital cortex ROIs was 1.09, which was within normal range.•We propose a role for increased thalamic GABA in childhood absence epilepsy.

ObjectivesChildhood absence epilepsy (CAE) is a syndrome with well-defined electroclinical features but unknown pathological basis. An increased thalamic tonic GABA inhibition has recently been discovered on animal models (Cope et al., 2009), but its relevance for human CAE is unproven.MethodsWe studied an 11-year-old boy, presenting the typical clinical features of CAE, but spike–wave discharges (SWD) restricted to one hemisphere.ResultsHigh-resolution EEG failed to demonstrate independent contralateral hemisphere epileptic activity. Consistently, simultaneous EEG–fMRI revealed the typical thalamic BOLD activation, associated with caudate and default mode network deactivation, but restricted to the hemisphere with SWD. Cortical BOLD activations were localized on the ipsilateral pars transverse. Magnetic resonance spectroscopy, using MEGA-PRESS, showed that the GABA/creatine ratio was 2.6 times higher in the hemisphere with SWD than in the unaffected one, reflecting a higher GABA concentration. Similar comparisons for the patient's occipital cortex and thalamus of a healthy volunteer yielded asymmetries below 25%.SignificanceIn a clinical case of CAE with EEG and fMRI-BOLD manifestations restricted to one hemisphere, we found an associated increase in thalamic GABA concentration consistent with a role for this abnormality in human CAE.

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