Seizure freedom after surgical resection of diffusion-weighted MRI abnormalities
Jonathan Horsley, Gerard Hall, Callum Simpson, Csaba Kozma, Rhys, Thomas, Yujiang Wang, Jane de Tisi, Anna Miserocchi, Andrew McEvoy, Sjoerd, Vos, Gavin Winston, John Duncan, Peter Taylor

TL;DR
This study shows that resecting diffusion-weighted MRI abnormalities in epilepsy patients significantly improves post-surgical seizure freedom, highlighting the importance of dMRI in surgical planning.
Contribution
It demonstrates that diffusion abnormalities identified by dMRI are crucial targets for resection to achieve seizure freedom in epilepsy surgery.
Findings
Resection of the largest diffusion abnormality cluster correlates with higher seizure freedom rates.
Partial removal of the largest abnormal cluster can still lead to seizure freedom.
Incorporating dMRI into pre-surgical planning improves surgical outcomes.
Abstract
Importance: Many individuals with drug-resistant epilepsy continue to have seizures after resective surgery. Accurate identification of focal brain abnormalities is essential for successful neurosurgical intervention. Current clinical approaches to identify structural abnormalities for surgical targeting in epilepsy do not use diffusion-weighted MRI (dMRI), despite evidence that dMRI abnormalities are present in epilepsy and may relate to the epileptogenic zone. Objective: To investigate whether surgical resection of diffusion abnormalities relates to post-operative seizure freedom. Design: This retrospective case-control study was conducted between 2009 and 2022. Data were acquired at the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, UK. Study participants included 200 individuals with drug-resistant focal epilepsy, who underwent resective surgery, and 97 healthy controls used as a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Neuroimaging Techniques and Applications · Advanced MRI Techniques and Applications · Glioma Diagnosis and Treatment
MethodsDiffusion
