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Brain Advance Access published online on September 23, 2008

Brain, doi:10.1093/brain/awn224
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© The Author (2008). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Small focal cortical dysplasia lesions are located at the bottom of a deep sulcus

Pierre Besson, Frederick Andermann, Francois Dubeau and Andrea Bernasconi

Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery and Brain Imaging Center, McGill University, Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital, Montreal, Quebec, Canada

Correspondence to: Andrea Bernasconi, MD, Montreal Neurological Hospital and Institute, 3801 University Street, Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3A 2B4 E-mail: andrea{at}bic.mni.mcgill.ca

Focal cortical dysplasia (FCD) is often characterized by minor structural changes that may go unrecognized by standard radiological analysis. Visual assessment of morphological characteristics of FCD and sulci harbouring them is difficult due to the complexity of brain convolutions. Our purpose was to elucidate and quantify the spatial relationship between FCD lesions and brain sulci using automated sulcal extraction and morphometry. We studied 43 consecutive FCD patients using high-resolution MRI. Lesions were classified into small and large using qualitative (detection on initial clinical assessment of conventional MRI) and quantitative (volume) criteria. Sulci were identified and labelled automatically using an algorithm based on a congregation of neural networks. Segmented FCD lesions and sulci were then simultaneously visualized in 3D. We measured mean and maximum depth of sulci related to each FCD and of the corresponding sulci in 21 healthy controls. In addition, we calculated sulcal depth within the FCD neighbourhood. Twenty-one (21/43 = 49%) patients had small FCD lesions (volume range: 128–3093 mm3). Among them, 17 (81%) had been overlooked during initial radiological evaluation and were subsequently identified using image processing. Eighteen (18/21 = 86%) small FCD lesions were located at the bottom of a sulcus. Two others were related to the walls of two sulci and one was located at the crown of a gyrus. Mean and maximum depth of sulci related to the FCD was higher than that of the corresponding sulci in controls (P < 0.008). Sulcal depth within lesional neighbourhood had larger mean depth than that of the entire sulcus (P < 0.0002). Evidence that small FCD lesions are preferentially located at the bottom of an abnormally deep sulcus may be used to direct the search for developmental abnormalities, particularly in patients in whom large-scale MRI features are only mildly abnormal or absent.

Key Words: epilepsy; focal cortical dysplasia; sulcal morphology; MRI; image analysis

Received May 9, 2008. Revised August 11, 2008. Accepted August 18, 2008.


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