Literature DB >> 16357638

Interictal to ictal transition in human temporal lobe epilepsy: insights from a computational model of intracerebral EEG.

Fabrice Wendling1, Alfredo Hernandez, Jean-Jacques Bellanger, Patrick Chauvel, Fabrice Bartolomei.   

Abstract

In human partial epilepsies and in experimental models of chronic and/or acute epilepsy, the role of inhibition and the relationship between the inhibition and excitation and epileptogenesis has long been questioned. Besides experimental methods carried out either in vitro (human or animal tissue) or in vivo (animals), pathophysiologic mechanisms can be approached by direct recording of brain electrical activity in human epilepsy. Indeed, in some clinical presurgical investigation methods like stereoelectroencephalography, intracerebral electrodes are used in patients suffering from drug resistant epilepsy to directly record paroxysmal activities with excellent temporal resolution (in the order of 1 millisecond). The study of neurophysiologic mechanisms underlying such depth-EEG activities is crucial to progress in the understanding of the interictal to ictal transition. In this study, the authors relate electrophysiologic patterns typically observed during the transition from interictal to ictal activity in human mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE) to mechanisms (at a neuronal population level) involved in seizure generation through a computational model of EEG activity. Intracerebral EEG signals recorded from hippocampus in five patients with MTLE during four periods (during interictal activity, just before seizure onset, during seizure onset, and during ictal activity) were used to identify the three main parameters of a model of hippocampus EEG activity (related to excitation, slow dendritic inhibition and fast somatic inhibition). The identification procedure used optimization algorithms to minimize a spectral distance between real and simulated signals. Results demonstrated that the model generates very realistic signals for automatically identified parameters. They also showed that the transition from interictal to ictal activity cannot be simply explained by an increase in excitation and a decrease in inhibition but rather by time-varying ensemble interactions between pyramidal cells and local interneurons projecting to either their dendritic or perisomatic region (with slow and fast GABAA kinetics). Particularly, during preonset activity, an increasing dendritic GABAergic inhibition compensates a gradually increasing excitation up to a brutal drop at seizure onset when faster oscillations (beta and low gamma band, 15 to 40 Hz) are observed. These faster oscillations are then explained by the model feedback loop between pyramidal cells and interneurons targeting their perisomatic region. These findings obtained from model identification in human temporal lobe epilepsy are in agreement with some results obtained experimentally, either on animal models of epilepsy or on the human epileptic tissue.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16357638      PMCID: PMC2443706     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Neurophysiol        ISSN: 0736-0258            Impact factor:   2.177


  36 in total

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2.  Spike timing of distinct types of GABAergic interneuron during hippocampal gamma oscillations in vitro.

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Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2004-10-13       Impact factor: 6.167

3.  The First International Collaborative Workshop on Seizure Prediction: summary and data description.

Authors:  Klaus Lehnertz; Brian Litt
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Journal:  Nat Neurosci       Date:  2001-01       Impact factor: 24.884

9.  Vulnerability and plasticity of the GABA system in the pilocarpine model of spontaneous recurrent seizures.

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Journal:  Epilepsy Res       Date:  1996-12       Impact factor: 3.045

10.  Functional and anatomic correlates of two frequently observed temporal lobe seizure-onset patterns.

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Journal:  Neural Plast       Date:  2000       Impact factor: 3.599

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  55 in total

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2.  Model-based measurement of epileptic tissue excitability.

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3.  Proposing a two-level stochastic model for epileptic seizure genesis.

Authors:  F Shayegh; S Sadri; R Amirfattahi; K Ansari-Asl
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4.  Exploring neural directed interactions with transfer entropy based on an adaptive kernel density estimator.

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5.  A multiformalism and multiresolution modelling environment: application to the cardiovascular system and its regulation.

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6.  Paroxysmal fast activity: an interictal scalp EEG marker of epileptogenesis in children.

Authors:  Joyce Y Wu; Susan Koh; Raman Sankar; Gary W Mathern
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Review 7.  Role of multiple-scale modeling of epilepsy in seizure forecasting.

Authors:  Levin Kuhlmann; David B Grayden; Fabrice Wendling; Steven J Schiff
Journal:  J Clin Neurophysiol       Date:  2015-06       Impact factor: 2.177

8.  'Functional connectivity' is a sensitive predictor of epilepsy diagnosis after the first seizure.

Authors:  Linda Douw; Marjolein de Groot; Edwin van Dellen; Jan J Heimans; Hanneke E Ronner; Cornelis J Stam; Jaap C Reijneveld
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2010-05-26       Impact factor: 3.240

9.  Long-term effects of temporal lobe epilepsy on local neural networks: a graph theoretical analysis of corticography recordings.

Authors:  Edwin van Dellen; Linda Douw; Johannes C Baayen; Jan J Heimans; Sophie C Ponten; W Peter Vandertop; Demetrios N Velis; Cornelis J Stam; Jaap C Reijneveld
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10.  Changes in EEG power spectral density and cortical connectivity in healthy and tetraplegic patients during a motor imagery task.

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