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New fMRI applications for childhood epilepsy increase understanding of seizure impacts

Press releases may be edited for formatting or style | December 14, 2017 Alzheimers/Neurology fMRI MRI Pediatrics
WASHINGTON - (December 11, 2017) - Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) has allowed researchers to map the memory functions that are often impaired within the brains of children with epilepsy. Additionally, a separate study of a novel application of resting-state fMRI, where the patient does not have to complete tasks, demonstrated the potential for clinicians to use non-invasive fMRI for language assessment for children who are too young or impaired to follow task directions in traditional fMRI studies. Both studies were presented at the American Epilepsy Society Annual Meeting in Washington, D.C., last week.

fMRI tool tracks verbal and visual memory in children with epilepsy

The first study, which developed a new fMRI task/activity designed to track verbal and visual memory, is one of only a few pediatric memory studies using fMRI in children with epilepsy.
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"Non-invasive fMRI is a powerful tool and an excellent alternative to more invasive testing to measure language and memory," says William D. Gaillard, M.D., a senior author of the study and chief of Child Neurology, Epilepsy and Neurophysiology who also directs the Comprehensive Pediatric Epilepsy Program at Children's National Health System. "This study allowed us to elicit hippocampal and parahippocampal activation in children with epilepsy and compare the findings with controls to demonstrate that fMRI may be used effectively to track memory and recall ability in children with epilepsy."

The study included twenty-one children with focal epilepsy and 17 controls to assess how well a new paired association learning fMRI task captured the verbal and visual memory activities of the hippocampus and the parahippocampal regions of the brain--which are known to play significant roles in verbal and visual memory.

Though a small sample, the results suggest that fMRI memory tasks such as the one tested can be used to produce findings that are sensitive to the hippocampal activity differences in children, which may lead to an important clinical tool for presurgical planning.

Mapping language skills using resting state fMRI before epilepsy surgery

A second study demonstrated the ability of functional connectivity analysis within a resting-state fMRI to assess language laterality, meaning to help determine the dominant side of the brain controlling language, when compared with the current standard of a language-task fMRI measure.

"Mapping language prior to epilepsy surgery is vital to evaluating the risks of postoperative deficits in children," says Dr. Gaillard. "But asking a very young or intellectually impaired child to complete the tasks necessary for reliable mapping using standard fMRI practices is limited by the child's ability to comply with the demands of a task."

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