| Literature DB >> 26205426 |
Milan Brázdil1,2, Jan Cimbálník3, Robert Roman4,5, Daniel J Shaw6, Matt M Stead7, Pavel Daniel8,9, Pavel Jurák10,11, Josef Halámek12,13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Until now there has been no way of distinguishing between physiological and epileptic hippocampal ripples in intracranial recordings. In the present study we addressed this by investigating the effect of cognitive stimulation on interictal high frequency oscillations in the ripple range (80-250 Hz) within epileptic (EH) and non-epileptic hippocampus (NH).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26205426 PMCID: PMC4513957 DOI: 10.1186/s12868-015-0184-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurosci ISSN: 1471-2202 Impact factor: 3.288
Patient characteristics
| Subject | Gender | Age at SEEG | FS | Age at Seizure onset | MRI before SEEG | Type and side of epilepsy | SOZ | Intervention/histopathology | Postoperative outcome (follow-up) | Number of analyzed hippocampal contacts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | F | 28 | − | 13 | Meningoencephalocele and hypotrophy of left temporal pole | TLE/L | Left temporopolar region | AMTR and plastic surgery of skull base | Seizure-free (3 years) | 3 (E) |
| 2 | F | 23 | − | 13 | Local atrophy and gliosis in the horn of left lateral ventricle after exstirpation of pilocystic astrocytoma within parieto-occipital region | ETLE/L | Left parieto-occipital bounder and occipital lobe | Reoperation: lesionectomy/reparative changes after exstirpation of astrocytoma | Seizure-free (1 year) | 3 (N) |
| 3 | F | 37 | − | 17 | Normal | TLE/R | Right hippocampus | AMTR/FCD | Seizure-free (3 years) | 8 (E) |
| 4 | M | 35 | − | 23 | Normal | TLE/R | Right hippocampus | AMTR/normal | Improved (2.5 years) | 5 (E), 5 (N) |
| 5 | F | 33 | + | 5 | Normal | TLE/R | Right hippocampus and temp. pole | AMTR/FCD | Improved (1.5 years) | 5 (E), 3 (N) |
| 6 | F | 25 | − | 6 | Susp. cortical dysplasia TPO left | ETLE/L | Left lateral tempo–parieto–occipital region | Focal cortectomy/normal | Not improved (2 years) | 3 (N) |
| 7 | M | 47 | + | 6 | Slight atrophy of right hippocampus | ETLE/R | Right lateral parieto-occipital region | VNS/– | Non-responder (1.5 years) | 7 (N) |
| 8 | M | 35 | − | 28 | MTS left | TLE/L | Left hippocampus | AMTR/gliosis | Improved (3 years) | 2 (E), 6 (N) |
| 9 | F | 28 | − | 3.5 | normal | ETLE/R | Multifocal frontal | VNS/– | Responder (1 year) | 3 (N) |
| 10 | F | 20 | − | 16 | Left temporal pole resection due to epilepsy | TLE/bilat | Left and right hippocampus (independ.) | VNS/– | Non-responder (1 year) | 8 (E) |
SEEG stereoelectroencephalography, FS febrile seizures, SOZ seizure onset zone, MTS mesiotemporal sclerosis, TPO temporo–parieto–occipital, TLE tempoval lobe epilepsy, ETLE extratemporal lobe epilepsy, R right, L left, AMTR anteromesial temporal resection, VNS vagal nerve stimulation, FCD focal cortical dysplasia, (E) epileptic, (N) non-epileptic.
Figure 1A demonstration of ripple detection. Top to bottom raw data from a single subject and contact; ripples within the signal filtered at 80–250 Hz; automated detection using amplitude of power envelope.
Figure 2Block diagram of computational method for ripple detection.
Figure 3Ripple rates during resting-state and cognitive-task periods within epileptic and non-epileptic hippocampi across all investigated subjects. Black asterisk means significant difference in epileptic hippocampus (p < 0.05).
Changes in relative ripple rates immediately after cognitive stimul ation (computed in 500 ms moving window, significant changes compared to baseline −0.6 s to −0.1 s are highlighted)
| Epileptic hippocampus | |||||||||||||
| Time (s) | Baseline | 0–0.5 | 0.1–0.6 | 0.2–0.7 | 0.3–0.8 | 0.4–0.9 | 0.5–1.0 | 0.6–1.1 | 0.7–1.2 | 0.9–1.4 | 1.0–1.5 |
|
|
| Mean RR | 0.7911 | 0.7595 | 0.7445 | 0.7630 | 0.8172 | 0.8130 | 0.7939 | 0.7842 | 0.8262 | 0.8951 | 0.9374 |
|
|
| SD | 0.2896 | 0.2174 | 0.2584 | 0.2941 | 0.3187 | 0.3711 | 0.3240 | 0.3025 | 0.3405 | 0.3934 | 0.3821 | 0.3699 | 0.3173 |
| P | 1.0000 | 0.3916 | 0.1524 | 0.4799 | 0.6655 | 1.0000 | 0.6718 | 0.5682 | 0.2026 | 0.3123 | 0.0854 |
|
|
| Non-epileptic hippocampus | |||||||||||||
| Time (s) | Baseline | 0–0.5 | 0.1–0.6 | 0.2–0.7 | 0.3–0.8 |
|
| 0.6–1.1 | 0.7–1.2 |
|
| 1.1–1.6 | 1.3–1.8 |
| Mean RR | 0.8880 | 0.9033 | 0.8405 | 0.7830 | 0.7782 |
|
| 0.9045 | 1.0418 |
|
| 1.1489 | 1.0960 |
| SD | 0.2845 | 0.3465 | 0.3754 | 0.3893 | 0.3795 | 0.3705 | 0.3754 | 0.3501 | 0.4175 | 0.4225 | 0.3969 | 0.3886 | 0.3059 |
| P | 1.0000 | 1.0000 | 1.0000 | 0.6778 | 0.3317 |
|
| 0.6778 | 0.3222 |
|
| 0.0919 | 0.6778 |
Figure 4Immediate short-lasting impact of cognitive stimuli on ripple rate across subjects. a Transient suppression of relative ripple rate within epileptic (upper a) and non-epileptic (bottom a) hippocampus. Red vertical line defines visual stimulation onset (trigger). Full lines represent median, dotted lines 25 and 75 percentile across all subjects and all recording contacts. The figure clearly demonstrates task-induced HFOs reduction in non-epileptic hippocampus in time period approximately 0.3–1 s after the stimulation (arrow). White and gray horizontal bars indicate an area that corresponds to the box plots in the right b. b Box plots computed in baseline period before stimuli (−0.6 to −0.1 s) and after cognitive stimulation (0.4–0.9 s). Black asterisk means significant difference in non-epileptic hippocampus (p < 0.02).
Figure 5Observations from a single contact within the non-epileptic hippocampus of subject (patient no. 6). Bottom to top the transient post-stimulus decrease in ripple occurrence within non-epileptic hippocampus coincides with event related 80–250 Hz power envelope reduction, the genesis of local-field cognitive potential (P3). S stimulus.