Background: Temporal evolution of regional hyperperfusion in the late postictal stage in epilepsy has not been clearly defined.
Objective: To establish the late temporal evolution of the perfusion in epileptogenic zones using 6-hour postictal SPECT.
Methods: Ictal 99mTc-hexamethylpropyleneamine oxime (99mTc-HMPAO) SPECT was performed in 10 patients with intractable epilepsy (4 temporal lobe epilepsy, 6 neocortical epilepsy) followed by delayed acquisition and another 6-hour postictal SPECT after reinjection of 99mTc-HMPAO. The delayed acquired SPECT was subtracted from the reinjection SPECT to yield the 6-hour postictal SPECT. Interictal SPECT was acquired on another day. Late postictal perfusion was examined visually, and asymmetric indexes were compared with each other on ictal, 6-hour postictal, and interictal SPECT.
Results: Ictal SPECT images of delayed acquisition were visually and quantitatively similar to those of early acquisition. In 7 of 10 patients, 6-hour postictal SPECT showed hyperperfusion. In one patient, the 6-hour postictal SPECT image showed less perfusion than the interictal SPECT image in the epileptogenic zone.
Conclusions: Late postictal hyperperfusion was found in more than half of the patients. Postictal perfusion abnormalities did not come back to the interictal phase 6 hours after ictus and these were identified on ictal/postictal 99mTc- HMPAO SPECT.