Short post-injection seizure duration is associated with reduced power of ictal brain perfusion SPECT to lateralize the seizure onset zone

Abstract: Background

The aim of this study was to assess the impact of the post-injection electrical seizure duration on the identification of the seizure onset zone (SOZ) in ictal brain perfusion SPECT in presurgical evaluation of drug-resistant epilepsy.
Methods

176 ictal SPECT performed with 99mTc-HMPAO (n = 140) or -ECD (n = 36) were included retrospectively. Visual interpretation of the SPECT images (together with individual MRI and statistical hyperperfusion maps) with respect to lateralization (right, left, none) and localization (temporal, frontal, parietal, occipital) of the SOZ was performed by 3 independent readers. Between-readers agreement was characterized by Fleiss’ κ. An ictal SPECT was considered "lateralizing" if all readers agreed on right or left hemisphere. It was considered "localizing" if it was lateralizing and all readers agreed on the same lobe within the same hemisphere. The impact of injection latency and post-injection seizure duration on the proportion of lateralizing/localizing SPECT was tested by ANOVA with dichotomized (by the median) injection latency and post-injection seizure duration as between-subjects factors.
Results

Median [interquartile range] (full range) of injection latency and post-injection seizure duration were 30 [24, 40] (3–120) s and 50 [27, 70] (-20–660) s, respectively. Fleiss’ κ for lateralization of the SOZ was largest for the combination of early (< 30 s) injection and long (> 50 s) post-injection seizure duration (κ = 0.894, all other combinations κ = 0.659–0.734). Regarding Fleiss’ κ for localization of the SOZ in the 141 (80.1%) lateralizing SPECT, it was largest for early injection and short post-injection seizure duration (κ = 0.575, all other combinations κ = 0.329–0.368). The proportion of lateralizing SPECT was lower with short compared to long post-injection seizure duration (estimated marginal means 74.3% versus 86.3%, p = 0.047). The effect was mainly driven by cases with very short post-injection seizure duration ≤ 10 s (53.8% lateralizing). Injection latency in the considered range had no significant impact on the proportion of lateralizing SPECT (p = 0.390). The proportion of localizing SPECT among the lateralizing cases did not depend on injection latency or post-injection seizure duration (p ≥ 0.603).
Conclusions

Short post-injection seizure duration is associated with a lower proportion of lateralizing cases in ictal brain perfusion SPECT

Location
Deutsche Nationalbibliothek Frankfurt am Main
Extent
Online-Ressource
Language
Englisch
Notes
EJNMMI research. - 14, 1 (2024) , 40, ISSN: 2191-219X

Event
Veröffentlichung
(where)
Freiburg
(who)
Universität
(when)
2024
Creator
Karimzadeh, Amir
Baradaran-Salimi, Kian
Voges, Berthold Rolf
Apostolova, Ivayla
Sauvigny, Thomas
Lanz, Michael
Klutmann, Susanne
Stodieck, Stefan
Meyer, Philipp Tobias
Buchert, Ralph

DOI
10.1186/s13550-024-01095-5
URN
urn:nbn:de:bsz:25-freidok-2469228
Rights
Open Access; Der Zugriff auf das Objekt ist unbeschränkt möglich.
Last update
25.03.2025, 1:57 PM CET

Data provider

This object is provided by:
Deutsche Nationalbibliothek. If you have any questions about the object, please contact the data provider.

Associated

Time of origin

  • 2024

Other Objects (12)