RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Decreased Subcortical T2 FLAIR Signal Associated with Seizures JF American Journal of Neuroradiology JO Am. J. Neuroradiol. FD American Society of Neuroradiology DO 10.3174/ajnr.A6328 A1 Nicholson, P. A1 Abdulla, S. A1 Alshafai, L. A1 Mandell, D.M. A1 Krings, T. YR 2019 UL http://www.ajnr.org/content/early/2019/12/05/ajnr.A6328.abstract AB SUMMARY: Abnormally decreased T2/T2 FLAIR signal can be seen on brain imaging of patients who are experiencing clinical or subclinical seizures and can be associated with various intracranial pathologies. We identified 29 such patients. The abnormal signal was unilateral in 75.9% of patients. It affected various lobes of the brain, but only in the anterior circulation. In 28 patients (96.6%), there was corresponding decreased signal on DWI. The ADC was normal in all cases. In 26 patients (89.7%), there was corresponding low signal on SWI/gradient recalled-echo; 44.8% of patients underwent contrast-enhanced scans, and there was no abnormal enhancement. Twenty-two (75.9%) patients had documented clinical seizures on the day of imaging. The most frequent concomitant pathology was a subdural hematoma. Electroencephalograms obtained within 24 hours of imaging were available in 65.5%. Findings of all of these electroencephalograms were abnormal, and these electroencephalogram changes were either localized to the area of the abnormal MR imaging signal (where the signal was unilateral) or were bilateral (where the MR imaging changes were bilateral). In summary, decreased white matter T2/T2 FLAIR signal changes can be seen in patients with remarkably similar clinical findings (particularly seizures). These changes are often correlated with abnormal electroencephalogram activity localized to the involved lobes.EEGelectroencephalogramGREgradient recalled-echo