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Division of Nuclear Medicine; Epilepsy Monitoring Unit, Department of Neurology; and Department ofNeurosurgery, Gent University Hospital, Gent, Belgium
Correspondence: For correspondence or reprints contact: Koenraad Van Laere, MD, DSc, Division of Nuclear Medicine, P7, Gent University Hospital, De Pintelaan 185, 9000 Gent, Belgium.
ABSTRACT
Left-sided vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) is an efficacious treatment for patients with refractory epilepsy. The exact mechanism of action remains to be elucidated. This study investigated the acute effects of initial VNS in patients with refractory complex partial epilepsy with or without secondary generalization (complex partial seizures [CPS] ± SG) by means of a perfusion activation study with SPECT. Methods: Twelve patients (mean age, 32.2 ± 10.2 y; age range, 1247 y) with a mean duration of CPS ± SG of 19.8 ± 10.0 y (range, 533 y) received VNS. All patients were considered unsuitable candidates for resective surgery because of nonlocalizing findings on presurgical evaluation. VNS efficacy was evaluated for patients with at least 4-mo follow-up. VNS-induced regional cerebral blood flow alterations were studied by a 99mTc-ethyl cysteinate dimer activation study with a single-day split-dose protocol before and immediately after an initial stimulation. Images were acquired on a triple-head camera with fanbeam collimators. After coregistration to a standardized template, both a semiquantitative analysis using predefined volumes of interest and a voxel-by-voxel analysis of the intrasubject activation (statistical parametric mapping) were performed. Results: Seizure-frequency changes ranged from 100% decrease to 0% after VNS. The semiquantitative analysis revealed a consistent decrease of activity in the left thalamus (ratio stimulator on/off = 0.94 ± 0.04; P = 0.005). These results were concordant with the voxel-by-voxel analysis in which a significant deactivation in the left thalamus was found with spread to the ipsilateral hippocampus. There was no statistically significant correlation between initial VNS-induced thalamic hypoperfusion and seizure reduction at maximum follow-up. Conclusion: Our findings are consistent with the hypothesis that acute VNS reduces seizure onset or propagation through inhibition of the thalamic relay center. Differences with limited H215O PET data may be associated with temporal effects caused by a stimulation-induced local hemodynamic response and need further investigation. SPECT allows study of cerebral physiopathologic effects of vagus nerve electrostimulation in complex partial epilepsy.
Key Words: epilepsy SPECT thalamus vagus nerve stimulation
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