| Literature DB >> 32153492 |
Yvonne Höller1,2, Christopher Höhn2,3, Fabian Schwimmbeck2,3, Gaën Plancher4, Eugen Trinka2.
Abstract
Antiepileptic drugs impair episodic memory in patients with epilepsy, but this effect has so far only been examined with tests that do not provide first-person experience-an aspect that is crucial for episodic memory. Virtual reality techniques facilitate the development of ecologically valid tests. In the present study, we measure the effect of antiepileptic drug changes in a within-subject design using a virtual reality test in order to provide direct evidence for effects of antiepileptic drugs on episodic memory. Among 106 recruited patients, 97 participated in a virtual reality test up to six times during a 4-day hospitalization, and 78 patients underwent changes in drug load during this period. There were six parallel versions of a virtual town test, with immediate recall and delayed recall after about 12 h. The test requires recall of elements, details, sequence of experience, and egocentric and allocentric spatial memory. We determined drug load by defined daily dose, and compared test performance at lowest antiepileptic drug load to highest antiepileptic drug load. Across the six towns, performance was lower in delayed compared to immediate recall. There was an overall effect of medication when comparing patients taking vs. not taking antiepileptic drugs and/or psychoactive drugs (p = 0.005). Furthermore, there was a within-subject effect of antiepileptic drug load (p = 0.01), indicating lower test performance at higher drug load. There was no effect of gender, daytime, circadian type, depression, seizures, lesions, and epilepsy. For patients with temporal lobe epilepsy, there was no effect of lateralization. The present study provides direct evidence for episodic memory impairment due to antiepileptic drugs, suggesting that a small change in drug load can matter. This study can serve as a proof of principle for the methodology, but a larger sample is needed to examine the differential effects of individual antiepileptic drugs.Entities:
Keywords: antiepileptic drugs; epilepsy; epilepsy monitoring unit; episodic memory; virtual reality
Year: 2020 PMID: 32153492 PMCID: PMC7045343 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2020.00093
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Outline of the procedure during the seven test sessions.
Figure 2Path from town 1, showing the 10 scenes and the path the participant had to navigate through.
Figure 3Outline of the six towns.
Sample: Clinical information.
| Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) score, mean (SD) | 10.35 | (8.73) |
| At least minimal depression (BDI > 8), no. (%) | 47 | (48.45%) |
| Focal epilepsy, no. (%) | 61 | (64.21%) |
| Generalized epilepsy, no. (%) | 13 | (13.68%) |
| No epilepsy, no. (%) | 12 | (12.63%) |
| Unclear diagnosis, no. (%) | 9 | (9.47%) |
| Age at first event, median [range] | 19 | [0–62] |
| Years since onset, median [range] | 6.5 | [0–59] |
| At least one status epilepticus during life, no. (%) | 14 | (14.43%) |
| Status epilepticus within last year, no. (%) | 7 | (7.22%) |
| 1 seizure during stay, no. (%) | 13 | (13.40%) |
| >1 seizure during stay, no. (%) | 27 | (27.84%) |
| ≥1 night sleep deprivation during stay, no. (%) | 30 | (30.93%) |
Education and chronotype of participants.
| Less than school leaving examination, no. (%) | 57 | (58.76%) |
| School leaving examination, no. (%) | 21 | (21.65%) |
| University degree, no. (%) | 5 | (5.15%) |
| Clearly morning type, no. (%) | 5 | (5.15%) |
| Rather morning type, no. (%) | 17 | (17.53%) |
| Neutral type, no. (%) | 57 | (58.56%) |
| Rather evening type, no. (%) | 13 | (13.40%) |
| Clearly evening type, no. (%) | 4 | (4.12%) |
Sample: Medication day 1.
| No antiepileptic drugs, no. (%) | 22 | (22.68%) |
| 1 antiepileptic drug, no. (%) | 41 | (42.27%) |
| 2 antiepileptic drugs, no. (%) | 22 | (22.68%) |
| 3 antiepileptic drugs, no. (%) | 11 | (11.34%) |
| Antiepileptic drug tapering during stay, no. (%) | 67 | (63.81%) |
| Antiepileptic drug change/uptitration, no. (%) | 11 | (10.48%) |
| No psychiatric drugs, no. (%) | 79 | (81.44%) |
| 1 psychiatric drug, no. (%) | 9 | (9.28%) |
| 2 psychiatric drugs, no. (%) | 4 | (4.12%) |
| 3 psychiatric drugs, no. (%) | 3 | (3.09%) |
| 3 psychiatric drugs, no. (%) | 1 | (1.03%) |
1 missing data for one patient without epilepsy.
Drugs taken by participants on first day of assessment.
| Amisulpride | 1 |
| Aripiprazol | 2 |
| Brivaracetam | 1 |
| Carbamazepine | 11 |
| Clobazam | 5 |
| Clonazepam | 2 |
| Clozapine | 1 |
| Duloxetin | 1 |
| Escitalopram | 2 |
| Eslicarbazepinacetat | 2 |
| Ethosuximide | 1 |
| Fluoxetine | 1 |
| Hydromorphone | 2 |
| Lacosamide | 12 |
| Lamotrigine | 13 |
| Levetiracetam | 51 |
| Lorazepam | 1 |
| Mirtazepine | 2 |
| Nitrazepam | 2 |
| Oxcarbazepine | 9 |
| Perampanel | 3 |
| Pregabalin | 4 |
| Quetiapin | 2 |
| Risperidone | 3 |
| Rufinamid | 1 |
| Sertralin | 5 |
| Topiramate | 3 |
| Trazodone | 3 |
| Triazolam | 1 |
| Valproic acid | 9 |
| Venlafaxine | 4 |
| Zolpidem | 1 |
| Zonisamid | 6 |
Number of patients per test session.
| 1 | 95 | 90 |
| 2 | 87 | 79 |
| 3 | 85 | 81 |
| 4 | 66 | 61 |
| 5 | 60 | 57 |
| 6 | 50 | 45 |
Control group effects of habituation over the week.
| 3.53 | 3.00 | 0.71 | 2.77 | 2.27 | |
| 0.02 | 0.03 | 0.57 | 0.03 | 0.09 | |
| Rank means | |||||
| 1 | 32.83 | 32.89 | 29.67 | 33.33 | 24.94 |
| 2 | 29.22 | 31.78 | 27.83 | 29.44 | 29.39 |
| 3 | 31.00 | 30.39 | 22.78 | 24.39 | 30.50 |
| 4 | 19.89 | 15.33 | 24.83 | 20.11 | 23.67 |
| 5 | 31.72 | 28.61 | 33.83 | 31.39 | 35.89 |
| 6 | 20.33 | 26.00 | 26.06 | 26.33 | 20.61 |
Ego, egocentric where; Allo, allocentric where.
Non-parametric analysis of factor daytime in interaction with chronotype.
| What | 0.40 | 0.526 | 0.53 | 0.556 | 0.912 | 0.395 |
| Details | 0.25 | 0.618 | 0.97 | 0.369 | 0.25 | 0.709 |
| When | 1.22 | 0.270 | 2.54 | 0.100 | 0.32 | 0.667 |
| Egocentric | 1.67 | 0.196 | 0.16 | 0.829 | 0.34 | 0.944 |
| Allocentric | 0.28 | 0.594 | 0.06 | 0.918 | 0.70 | 0.457 |
ATS, ANOVA-type test value; p, p-value; df: (1,1).
Bonferroni-corrected critical alpha level is p < 0.01.
Correlation with age.
| What | –0.29 | 0.017 | –0.36 | 0.001 |
| Details | –0.40 | <0.001 | –0.36 | 0.001 |
| When | –0.18 | 0.213 | –0.16 | 0.165 |
| Egocentric | –0.25 | 0.037 | –0.20 | 0.071 |
| Allocentric | –0.19 | 0.132 | –0.33 | 0.003 |
Bonferroni-corrected alpha level is p < 0.005.
Figure 4Test sessions with minimum and maximum antiepileptic drug load.
Effect of drug load.
| What | 7.43 | 0.006 | 22.27 | <0.001 | 1.16 | 0.282 |
| Details | 1.42 | 0.234 | 8.03 | 0.005 | 0.26 | 0.611 |
| When | 7.90 | 0.005 | 5.86 | 0.015 | 1.73 | 0.189 |
| Egocentric | 5.39 | 0.020 | 24.57 | <0.001 | 1.66 | 0.198 |
| Allocentric | 12.23 | <0.001 | 1.44 | 0.230 | 0.30 | 0.582 |
ATS, ANOVA-type statistic; Bonferroni corrected p < 0.01.
Figure 5Interaction between time of testing (immediate vs. delayed) and drug load (high vs. low) on the subscales of the virtual town episodic memory test.
Figure 6Distribution of correlation coefficients across patients. Coefficients represent Fisher-r-to-z-transformed correlation coefficients resulting from a patient-wise Pearson correlation between antiepileptic drug load and memory scores over all available test sessions.