OBJECTIVE: To determine the influence of the location of the irritative zone, and the number and the distribution of the intracranial calcifications in the severity of epilepsy associated with intracranial calcifications. METHOD: We studied 47 patients with epilepsy and intracranial calcifications, 24 with normal (Group A) and 23 with abnormal interictal EEGs (Group B), a control group (n=21) with abnormal interictal EEGs and normal CT-scans (Group C). Clinical, electroencephalographic and neuroradiological features were compared among groups. RESULTS: Temporal lobe interictal EEG abnormalities were found in 23/24 Group B patients, and in all Group C patients. Most Group B and Group C patients presented temporal lobe seizure symptomatology, whereas in most Group A patients symptomatology was rolandic (p=0.0001). Epilepsy was more severe in Group B and Group C patients than in Group A patients (p=0.0001 and p=0.0054). No relationship was found between the number of calcifications and epilepsy severity. CONCLUSION: An irritative zone at the temporal lobe is more relevant in determining the severity, symptomatology and frequency of seizures than the number and location of calcifications.
epilepsy-localized; epilepsy-temporal lobe; neurocysticercosis; cysticercosis; calcifications-intracranial