The investigators plan to study inflammation in the brain (neuroinflammation) in human patients with epilepsy using a novel, non-invasive technique that has been proven successful in humans with other neuroinflammatory diseases. This technique uses ferumoxytol, a drug with minimal side effects that is FDA-approved for the treatment of iron deficiency anemia, as the contrast agent in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The study will recruit epilepsy patients who are admitted to Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center (DHMC) for video-electroencephalography (video-EEG) monitoring in order to evaluate their candidacy for curative brain surgery. During the hospital stay and after informed consent, the patient will receive a standard-dose intravenous injection of ferumoxytol, and undergo one session of MRI at 24-48 hours after the injection. The patient will also undergo a separate "baseline" MRI session (if not already done at DHMC) at admission or at more than four weeks after the injection but before any brain surgery. Brain regions that preferentially uptake ferumoxytol are localized by subtracting the post-injection MRI session from the "baseline" MRI session. The investigators will investigate whether these regions overlap with the epileptogenic focus, namely the region that generates epilepsy and is localized by video-EEG and other diagnostic measures. Lastly, for those patient participants who thereafter undergo brain surgery, DHMC neuropathologists will use special stains to detect and quantify neuroinflammation in brain tissue removed, and the results will serve as the reference for the investigators to measure the sensitivity and specificity of ferumoxytol-based MRI in detecting neuroinflammation.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
10
Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center
Lebanon, New Hampshire, United States
Overlap of epileptogenic zone with brain regions that take up ferumoxytol
Ferumoxytol will be injected within one hour of epileptic event and iron-sensitive MRI will be conducted within 48 hours.
Time frame: up to 48 hours after epileptic seizure
Immunohistochemical evidence of neuroinflammation in brain tissue that has taken up ferumoxytol
Brain tissue removed from those patients who undergo curative epilepsy surgery contains the epileptic focus. Histochemical analysis of abnormal areas of this brain tissue will be analyzed for correlation with areas of ferumoxytol uptake.
Time frame: Two years
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