Intralesional epileptiform activity in a fourth ventricular hamartoma associated with epileptic hemifacial spasm in a toddler: illustrative case

J Neurosurg Case Lessons. 2024 Jul 29;8(5):CASE2452. doi: 10.3171/CASE2452. Print 2024 Jul 29.

Abstract

Background: Focal epilepsy caused by a posterior fossa lesion is a rare phenomenon. In these cases, seizure onset typically occurs during the first few months of life, with episodes of epileptic hemifacial spasms and abnormal eye movements. Patients often present with drug-resistant epilepsy and often require resection for the best chance of seizure freedom.

Observations: The authors present the case of a 19-month-old male with intractable epileptic hemifacial spasms and a dorsally exophytic right brainstem and middle cerebellar peduncle hamartoma, following 2 prior subtotal resections. The authors recommended a third suboccipital craniotomy with intraoperative electrocorticography, which revealed interictal spiking from an intralesional depth electrode. Near-total resection led to durable seizure freedom.

Lessons: Although posterior fossa lesions are rarely associated with epileptiform activity, this case demonstrates that pediatric patients with epileptic hemifacial spasms associated with a posterior fossa lesion may respond favorably to resection. Furthermore, this case demonstrates that intralesional electrocorticography can detect epileptic activity in posterior fossa lesions, which may predict postoperative seizure outcomes. https://thejns.org/doi/10.3171/CASE2452.

Keywords: case report; cerebellar epilepsy; drug-resistant pediatric epilepsy; hamartoma; intralesional electrocorticography.