Optimized and Personalized Trans-cranial Brain Stimulation in Partial Refractory Epilepsies
Epilepsy is one of the most common neurological diseases, affecting between 0.5% and 1% of the general population. Therefore, new diagnostic and treatment methods are having a big impact on society. Epilepsy is also one of the most commonly diagnosed pediatric neurological disorders, with long-term implications for the quality of life of those affected and their relatives. In only two-thirds of cases, seizures can be adequately controlled with anticonvulsant drug therapy. For other patients with a drug-resistant focal epilepsy (up to around 2 million in Europe) epilepsy surgery is currently the most effective treatment. However, only 15-20% of these drug-resistant patients are eligible for epilepsy surgery. This is either because the cortical epileptogenic zone cannot be localized with sufficient precision with standard diagnostic means, or because the epileptogenic zone overlaps meaningful cortical areas, so that it cannot be surgically removed without considerable neurological deficit.
• Any patient, male or female aged 1 to 18, with refractory partial epilepsy considered potentially surgical according to the definition of ILAE. Drug-resistant epilepsy can be defined as the failure of adequate therapeutic trials of two antiepileptics (either monotherapy or in combination) so that the patient is free from seizures on a lasting basis.
• Any epileptic patient with interictal epileptic spikes on his standard or High Resolution EEG and or on the Magnetoencephalography examination
• Any epileptic patient undergoing a structural MRI
• Any patient who has agreed to participate in the PerEpi 1 study allowing the optimization of the location of epileptic sources and the modelling of the optimization of the parameters of transcranial electrical stimulation
• Patients who have at least 4 seizures per month