Chiari type I malformation is one of the posterior fossa maldevelopments with which different clinical manifestations have been associated. Seizures have only recently been associated with Chiari type I malformation. This study reports on 4 children with epilepsy (2M, 2F; age range 8-15 y) diagnosed with Chiari type I malformation by brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), in whom no cortical structural involvement was observed. In these patients an interictal ethylcysteinate-dimer-single-photon emission computed tomographic (ECD-SPECT) study was performed to define more precisely the relationship between Chiari type I malformation and seizures. In these patients the hypoperfusion area correlated with electroencephalographic (EEG) focal abnormalities. These hypoperfusions may represent the functional aspect of a cerebral microdysgenesis; seizures and EEG epileptic anomalies may also be linked to the complex network connection between cortices and cerebellar hemispheres. A cerebellar hypoperfusion was also detected in two of the four examined patients, indicating a functional or structural involvement. Interictal SPECT scans are helpful for the clarification of seizures in patients with Chiari type I malformation.