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Introduction: Stereoelectroencephalography-guided radio-frequency thermo coagulation (SEEG-RFTC) is a minimally invasive technique whereby radiofrequency-thermocoagulation is performed using SEEG electrodes, following recording and stimulation. It helps to disconnect/disrupt or ablate the epileptogenic networks, and provides both therapeutic and diagnostic abilities.
Methods: Retrospective study (2016-2024). All underwent comprehensive epilepsy surgery workup (video EEG, MRI, ictal-SPECT, PET, and magnetoencephalography). SEEG was placed using robotic guidance. Recording of habitual seizure following stimulation (to produce seizures) was performed followed by SEEG-RFTC over the seizure onset zone(SOZ) was performed at the bedside, electrodes were then explanted. If seizures were still not, this was followed by surgery over SOZ.
Results: 61 patients underwent SEEG-RFTC, 41 males. Mean duration of seizures: 11 years; seizure frequency range 1-100/day. As per imaging, 5 had definite lesions, 12- dual substrates (either adjacent or distant), 5- doubtful lesions, 21- non-lesional on MRI, and 9-localization on SPECT/PET/MEG but MRI doubtful, 4-eloquent cortex and 5 had bilateral substrates. Seizure onset zone- frontal-18, temporal-35, insula-3, occipital-4, parietal-1. A total of 406 electrodes implanted, a mean 8.2+3.5/ patient. Mean follow up: 42 + 17.4 months.. About 72% (44/61) responded transiently (mean transient seizure free time- 95+19 days). Of these 29 underwent surgery; 48% had good outcomes (Class I & II). 22% (14/61) had good outcomes with SEEG-RFTC as stand-alone procedure (follow up 28+6.2 months, range 6-32 months). The Class I & I outcomes were 37% in MRI -ve and 53.8% in MRI +ve cases (p<0.01). The transient time in our study did not correlate with good outcomes, but presence or absence of a substrate did. Temporal substrates had better outcomes than extra-temporal (57% vs 47% Class I & II, p<0.01).
Conclusion: SEEG-RFTC is a minimally invasive and effective adjuvant to SEEG recording and stimulation, may be done bedside under awake conditions and helps to disrupt/disconnect/ablate the abnormal networks. It may be therapeutic or can strengthen the hypothesis for a later surgical resection.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000548196 | DOI Listing |
Cell Rep
September 2025
Department of Neurology, University of California, Los Angeles, David Geffen School of Medicine, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA; Department of Neurobiology, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA; Eli and Edythe Broad Center for Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Research, Un
Neurodevelopmental disorders often impair multiple cognitive domains. For instance, a genetic epilepsy syndrome might cause seizures due to cortical hyperexcitability and present with memory impairments arising from hippocampal dysfunction. This study examines how a single disorder differentially affects distinct brain regions using induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived cortical- and hippocampal-ganglionic eminence assembloids to model developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 13, a condition arising from gain-of-function mutations in the SCN8A gene encoding the sodium channel Nav1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEpilepsy Behav
September 2025
Department of Neurosurgery, Epilepsy Research Center of PLA, Xinqiao Hospital, Army Medical University, 183 Xinqiao Main Street, Shapingba District, Chongqing 400037, China. Electronic address:
Objective: Semiology-based preoperative anatomical hypotheses are necessary, yet comprehensive reports on the semiology and its correlation with central subregions in central epilepsy has still lacked. We wished to identify semiologic subgroups and their correlations with central subregions.
Methods: We retrospectively included 21 patients with central epilepsy identified by stereoelectroencephalography (sEEG).
J Clin Neurophysiol
July 2025
The Cortical Systems and Neural Engineering Laboratories, Department of Neurosurgery and Rehabilitation, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S.A.
Epilepsy is not solely a disorder of abnormal brain structure; it is fundamentally a disorder of disrupted brain networks and impaired communication across brain regions. Thalamic neuromodulation, once conceptualized as a fixed, anatomically guided intervention, is now undergoing a paradigm shift toward dynamic, network-informed modulation. Using tools such as stereo-EEG, diffusion MRI, and advanced connectomic analyses, we are entering a new era where neurostimulation strategies can be individualized, responsive, and aligned with the real-time neurophysiology and structural networks of each patient.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEpilepsy Behav Rep
September 2025
Department of Neurology and Agnes Ginges Center for Human Neurogenetics, Hadassah Medical Organization, Hadassah Ein Kerem, POB12000 Jerusalem, Israel.
The data obtained from stereo-elecroencephalography (SEEG) in patients with focal epilepsy are crucial for defining the epileptogenic zone and achieving successful resection, but suboptimal electrode placement impairs SEEG results. We demonstrate an approach for concurrent scalp and depth EEG analysis from one patient with successful intracranial workup and one in whom the seizure onset zone was unsampled by SEEG. Intracranial epileptiform discharges were identified and clustered, their scalp correlates were averaged, and electric source imaging (ESI) was applied to the resulting averaged scalp potential - depth-to-scalp ESI (dsESI).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStereotact Funct Neurosurg
September 2025
Introduction: Stereoelectroencephalography-guided radio-frequency thermo coagulation (SEEG-RFTC) is a minimally invasive technique whereby radiofrequency-thermocoagulation is performed using SEEG electrodes, following recording and stimulation. It helps to disconnect/disrupt or ablate the epileptogenic networks, and provides both therapeutic and diagnostic abilities.
Methods: Retrospective study (2016-2024).