Research Article

Characterizing Cerebral Imaging and Electroclinical Features of Five Pseudohypoparathyroidism Cases Presenting with Epileptic Seizures

Table 3

Summary of results regarding imaging tests and EEG records.

CaseCranial MRCranial CTX-ray of limbsEEG

1T1 shortening in the bilateral basal ganglia and hypothalamusBilateral calcification in basal ganglia and cerebellaNodular shadows on the first metatarsal bone of both feetNo interictal epileptiform discharges
2T1 shortening in the bilateral basal gangliaBilateral calcification in basal ganglia and frontal lobesNodular shadows on the first finger joint of both handsDelta waves and spike-slow waves in the right frontal and temporal lobes
3T1 shortening in the bilateral basal ganglia, frontal lobes, temporal lobes, and cerebellaBilateral calcification in basal ganglia and cerebellaNodular shadows on the first metatarsal bone of both feetSpike-slow waves in the bilateral frontal and temporal lobes and right central region
4T1 shortening in the bilateral basal gangliaBilateral calcification in basal ganglia, frontal and temporal lobes, and thalamus—Spike-slow waves in the right frontal lobe, central region, and the frontal midline area
5T1 shortening in the bilateral basal ganglia and left parietal occipitalBilateral calcification in basal ganglia, frontal lobes, and cerebellaNodular shadows on the first metatarsal bone of both feet, the first finger joint of both hands, left planta pedis, and right wrist jointNo interictal epileptiform discharges

EEG records of habitual seizure, and the others were interictal EEG.