PURPOSE: To examine the effects of cognitive-motor function on EEG discharges and the neuropsychological mechanisms of seizure induction in patients sensitive to cognitive-motor tasks. METHODS: Four hundred eighty patients with epilepsies were subjected to cognitive tasking, termed "neuropsychological EEG activation (NPA)." It consisted of reading, speaking, writing, written calculation, mental calculation, and spatial construction. Furthermore, patients showing a provocative NPA effect were subjected to a detailed NPA protocol to identify the possible precipitating factors, which consisted of simple hand movements, action programming requiring hand movement, and thinking activity not requiring hand movement. RESULTS: NPA had an inhibitory effect on EEG discharges in 133 (63.9%) of 208 patients with discharges in the awake EEG. Conversely, NAP had a provocative effect in 38 (7.9%) of 480 patients. In 32 of the 38 patients, the precipitating factor was action programming. Among them, five showed a precipitating factor restricted to linguistic activity, and the remaining 27 were affected by various action-programming factors including both linguistic and praxic activities. In four of 38 patients, the precipitating factor was thinking, predominantly linguistic tasks in one patient and spatial tasks in three patients. No patient had a precipitating factor identified as motor activity. CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that cognitive-motor function has an inhibitory effect on EEG discharges in the majority of epilepsy patients and a provocative effect in some patients, and that seizures of the patients showing a provocative NPA effect are precipitated by action programming or thinking activity.
PURPOSE: To examine the effects of cognitive-motor function on EEG discharges and the neuropsychological mechanisms of seizure induction in patients sensitive to cognitive-motor tasks. METHODS: Four hundred eighty patients with epilepsies were subjected to cognitive tasking, termed "neuropsychological EEG activation (NPA)." It consisted of reading, speaking, writing, written calculation, mental calculation, and spatial construction. Furthermore, patients showing a provocative NPA effect were subjected to a detailed NPA protocol to identify the possible precipitating factors, which consisted of simple hand movements, action programming requiring hand movement, and thinking activity not requiring hand movement. RESULTS: NPA had an inhibitory effect on EEG discharges in 133 (63.9%) of 208 patients with discharges in the awake EEG. Conversely, NAP had a provocative effect in 38 (7.9%) of 480 patients. In 32 of the 38 patients, the precipitating factor was action programming. Among them, five showed a precipitating factor restricted to linguistic activity, and the remaining 27 were affected by various action-programming factors including both linguistic and praxic activities. In four of 38 patients, the precipitating factor was thinking, predominantly linguistic tasks in one patient and spatial tasks in three patients. No patient had a precipitating factor identified as motor activity. CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that cognitive-motor function has an inhibitory effect on EEG discharges in the majority of epilepsypatients and a provocative effect in some patients, and that seizures of the patients showing a provocative NPA effect are precipitated by action programming or thinking activity.
Authors: Prince Antwi; Ece Atac; Jun Hwan Ryu; Christopher Andrew Arencibia; Shiori Tomatsu; Neehan Saleem; Jia Wu; Michael J Crowley; Barbara Banz; Federico E Vaca; Heinz Krestel; Hal Blumenfeld Journal: Epilepsy Behav Date: 2018-12-21 Impact factor: 2.937
Authors: Christian Vollmar; Jonathan O'Muircheartaigh; Gareth J Barker; Mark R Symms; Pamela Thompson; Veena Kumari; John S Duncan; Dieter Janz; Mark P Richardson; Matthias J Koepp Journal: Brain Date: 2011-06 Impact factor: 13.501
Authors: Britta Wandschneider; Maria Centeno; Christian Vollmar; Mark Symms; Pamela J Thompson; John S Duncan; Matthias J Koepp Journal: Brain Date: 2014-07-07 Impact factor: 13.501
Authors: Sira Carrasco-García de León; Guiomar Niso; Leonidas Canuet; Laura Burriel-Lobo; Fernando Maestú; María Gudín Rodríguez-Magariños Journal: Epilepsy Behav Case Rep Date: 2015-11-04
Authors: Lorenzo Caciagli; Britta Wandschneider; Maria Centeno; Christian Vollmar; Sjoerd B Vos; Karin Trimmel; Lili Long; Fenglai Xiao; Alexander J Lowe; Meneka K Sidhu; Pamela J Thompson; Gavin P Winston; John S Duncan; Matthias J Koepp Journal: Epilepsia Date: 2020-06-25 Impact factor: 6.740