Cristina Filipescu , Elisabeth Landré , Marc Zanello , Alessandro Moiraghi , Charles Mellerio , Magali Boutin , Benoît Crépon , Estelle Pruvost-Robieux , Anaïs Llorens , Johan Pallud , Martine Gavaret
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Stereoelectroencephalography (SEEG), which combines the exploration of identified intracerebral structures using depth electrodes and provides direct recording of local field potentials from multiple brain sites, was designed and developed in the 1950s by Jean Talairach and Jean Bancaud, in Sainte-Anne Hospital, Paris.
For patients with focal drug-resistant epilepsy, when the non-invasive phase is insufficiently concordant or when relationships between the epileptogenic network and eloquent areas remain to be defined, the main purpose of SEEG is the optimal electrode implantation based on a main hypothesis and questions formulated during the non-invasive phase.
Following an initial historical overview, the different steps of this non-invasive phase are described. Some of these steps, like semiology analysis, have remained relatively preserved, while others have considerably evolved, such as positron emission tomography combined with 3 Tesla magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), functional MRI (fMRI) and high-resolution EEG.
We then outline the different steps of the SEEG procedure as performed in our institution. Here also, some steps remain quite unchanged such as intracerebral stimulation, amitriptyline and benzodiazepine tests while some others have strikingly evolved such as frameless robot-assisted, MRI-based implantation, depth-signal analyses and quantifications, and radio-frequency thermocoagulation.
期刊介绍:
Neurophysiologie Clinique / Clinical Neurophysiology (NCCN) is the official organ of the French Society of Clinical Neurophysiology (SNCLF). This journal is published 6 times a year, and is aimed at an international readership, with articles written in English. These can take the form of original research papers, comprehensive review articles, viewpoints, short communications, technical notes, editorials or letters to the Editor. The theme is the neurophysiological investigation of central or peripheral nervous system or muscle in healthy humans or patients. The journal focuses on key areas of clinical neurophysiology: electro- or magneto-encephalography, evoked potentials of all modalities, electroneuromyography, sleep, pain, posture, balance, motor control, autonomic nervous system, cognition, invasive and non-invasive neuromodulation, signal processing, bio-engineering, functional imaging.