Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3052009 Epilepsy Research 2014 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We studied cortical motor activation in patients with frontal lobe epilepsy.•Patients performed a finger tapping and coordination task while undergoing fMRI.•Patients had greater BOLD activity in the healthy hemisphere compared to controls.•Patients had less BOLD activity in the epileptic hemisphere compared to controls.•Period of seizure freedom correlated to activity in the healthy hemisphere.

SummaryPurposePatients with frontal lobe epilepsy (FLE) commonly demonstrate motor impairments, suggesting that frontal lobe seizures affect motor function. However, the underlying mechanisms of these deficits are not known, nor has any study systematically examined motor organization in these patients. We therefore examined cortical motor organization in a group of adult patients with FLE, using task-based fMRI.MethodsEleven right FLE patients, six left FLE patients, and ten control subjects underwent task-based fMRI. Two tasks were performed using the right and left hands separately, and both hands together. The first task was a finger-tapping task and the second task was a more complex coordination task. Functional MR data were compared between patient groups and controls. A laterality index of brain activation was also calculated between the epileptic and healthy hemisphere to determine hemispheric dominance during task performance to explore its relationship with a variety of patient-specific epilepsy factors.ResultsOverall, right FLE patients demonstrated decreased BOLD activity in the epileptic hemisphere and increased BOLD activity in the healthy hemisphere compared to controls (p < 0.05). The comparison of left FLE patients to controls provided less conclusive differences, possibly due to the low number of left FLE patients studied. Laterality indices of the coordination task were positively correlated to the number of months since the last seizure in both patient groups (right FLE: rs = 0.779, left FLE: rs = 0.943). Patients that had experienced a recent seizure relied more on the sensorimotor cortex of the healthy hemisphere during task performance, compared to those that were relatively seizure free (p < 0.05).SignificancePatients with FLE exhibited changes in motor BOLD activity that was dependent on the duration of seizure freedom. These results demonstrate the presence of seizure-related alteration of cortical motor organization in FLE, which may underlie the motor deficits seen in these patients.

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