Volume 47, Issue 8 pp. 1343-1346

Speech Preservation during Language-dominant, Left Temporal Lobe Seizures: Report of a Rare, Potentially Misleading Finding

Kitti Kaiboriboon

Kitti Kaiboriboon

Departments of Neurology University of California, San Francisco, California

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Jack M. Parent

Jack M. Parent

Departments of Neurology University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan

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Nicholas M. Barbaro

Nicholas M. Barbaro

Department of Neurological Surgery, University of California, San Francisco, California, U.S.A.

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John A. Walker

John A. Walker

Departments of Neurology University of California, San Francisco, California

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Paul A. Garcia

Paul A. Garcia

Departments of Neurology University of California, San Francisco, California

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First published: 06 July 2006
Citations: 4
Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. P. Garcia at 400 Parnassus Avenue, UCSF Box 0138, San Francisco, CA 94143-0138, U.S.A. E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

Summary: Purpose: To evaluate the prevalence and mechanism of ictal speech in patients with language-dominant, left temporal lobe seizures.

Methods: We retrospectively reviewed the video-EEG telemetry records for the presence of ictal speech in 96 patients with surgically proven left temporal lobe epilepsy and studied the seizure-propagation patterns in three patients who required intracranial EEG recordings for seizure localization.

Results: Ictal speech preservation was observed in five patients. One patient's seizures demonstrated rapid propagation of the ictal discharges to the contralateral temporal area where the seizure evolved, resembling a nondominant temporal lobe seizure. The other two patients had ictal discharges that remained confined to the inferomesial temporal areas, sparing language cortex.

Conclusions: Preservation of speech in complex partial seizures of language-dominant, left temporal lobe origin is rare. Based on intracranial EEG recordings, the likely mechanism underlying this potentially misleading clinical finding is the preservation of language areas due to limited seizure-propagation patterns.

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