Identifying a structural brain lesion on MRI has important implications in epilepsy and is the most important correlate to seizure freedom after surgery in patients with drug-resistant focal onset epilepsy. However, at conventional magnetic field strengths (1.5 and 3T) only around 60-85% of MRI examinations reveal such lesions. Over the last decade, studies have demonstrated the added value of 7T MRI in patients with and without known epileptogenic lesions from 1.5 and/or 3T. However, translation of 7T MRI to clinical practice is still challenging, particularly in centers new to 7T, and there is a need for practical recommendations on targeted use of 7T MRI in the clinical management of patients with epilepsy. The 7T Epilepsy Task Force - an international group representing 21 7T MRI centers with experience from scanning over 2000 patients with epilepsy - would hereby like to share its experience with the neurology community regarding the appropriate clinical indications, patient selection and preparation, acquisition protocols and setup, technical challenges, and radiological guidelines for 7T MRI in epilepsy patients. This article mainly addresses structural imaging, but also presents multiple non-structural MRI techniques that benefit from 7T and hold promise as future directions in epilepsy. Answering to the increased availability of 7T MRI as an approved tool for diagnostic purposes, this article aims to give guidance on clinical 7T MRI epilepsy management by giving recommendations on referral, suitable 7T MRI protocols and image interpretation.

7T Epilepsy Task Force Consensus Recommendations on the use of 7T in Clinical Practice

Cosottini, Mirco;
2021-01-01

Abstract

Identifying a structural brain lesion on MRI has important implications in epilepsy and is the most important correlate to seizure freedom after surgery in patients with drug-resistant focal onset epilepsy. However, at conventional magnetic field strengths (1.5 and 3T) only around 60-85% of MRI examinations reveal such lesions. Over the last decade, studies have demonstrated the added value of 7T MRI in patients with and without known epileptogenic lesions from 1.5 and/or 3T. However, translation of 7T MRI to clinical practice is still challenging, particularly in centers new to 7T, and there is a need for practical recommendations on targeted use of 7T MRI in the clinical management of patients with epilepsy. The 7T Epilepsy Task Force - an international group representing 21 7T MRI centers with experience from scanning over 2000 patients with epilepsy - would hereby like to share its experience with the neurology community regarding the appropriate clinical indications, patient selection and preparation, acquisition protocols and setup, technical challenges, and radiological guidelines for 7T MRI in epilepsy patients. This article mainly addresses structural imaging, but also presents multiple non-structural MRI techniques that benefit from 7T and hold promise as future directions in epilepsy. Answering to the increased availability of 7T MRI as an approved tool for diagnostic purposes, this article aims to give guidance on clinical 7T MRI epilepsy management by giving recommendations on referral, suitable 7T MRI protocols and image interpretation.
2021
Opheim, Giske; van der Kolk, Anja; Bloch, Karin Markenroth; Colon, Albert J; Davis, Kathryn A; Henry, Thomas R; Jansen, Jacobus F A; Jones, Stephen E; Pan, Jullie W; Rössler, Karl; Stein, Joel M; Strandberg, Maria C; Trattnig, Siegfried; Van de Moortele, Pierre-Francois; Isabel Vargas, Maria; Wang, Irene; Bartolomei, Fabrice; Bernasconi, Neda; Bernasconi, Andrea; Bernhardt, Boris; Björkman-Burtscher, Isabella; Cosottini, Mirco; Das, Sandhitsu R; Hertz-Pannier, Lucie; Inati, Sara; Jurkiewicz, Michael T; Khan, Ali R; Liang, Shuli; Ma, Ruoyun Emily; Mukundan, Srinivasan; Pardoe, Heath; Pinborg, Lars H; Polimeni, Jonathan R; Ranjeva, Jean-Philippe; Steijvers, Esther; Stufflebeam, Steven; Veersema, Tim J; Vignaud, Alexandre; Voets, Natalie; Vulliemoz, Serge; Wiggins, Christopher J; Xue, Rong; Guerrini, Renzo; Guye, Maxime
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11568/1067988
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