| Literature DB >> 34223181 |
T Noah Hutson1, Farnaz Rezaei2, Nicole M Gautier3, Jagadeeswaran Indumathy4, Edward Glasscock5, Leonidas Iasemidis1.
Abstract
Goal: Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) is the leading cause of epilepsy-related mortality and its pathophysiological mechanisms remain unknown. We set to record and analyze for the first time concurrent electroencephalographic (EEG), electrocardiographic (ECG), and unrestrained whole-body plethysmographic (Pleth) signals from control (WT - wild type) and SUDEP-prone mice (KO- knockout Kcna1 animal model). Employing multivariate autoregressive models (MVAR) we measured all tri-organ effective directional interactions by the generalized partial directed coherence (GPDC) in the frequency domain over time (hours). When compared to the control (WT) animals, the SUDEP-prone (KO) animals exhibited (p < 0.001) reduced afferent and efferent interactions between the heart and the brain over the full frequency spectrum (0-200Hz), enhanced efferent interactions from the brain to the lungs and from the heart to the lungs at high (>90 Hz) frequencies (especially during periods with seizure activity), and decreased feedback from the lungs to the brain at low (<40 Hz) frequencies. These results show that impairment in the afferent and efferent pathways in the holistic neuro-cardio-respiratory network could lead to SUDEP, and effective connectivity measures and their dynamics could serve as novel biomarkers of susceptibility to SUDEP and seizures respectively.Entities:
Keywords: Brain-Heart-Lungs; Dynamics and Biomarkers; Epilepsy; Functional Network Connectivity; SUDEP
Year: 2020 PMID: 34223181 PMCID: PMC8249082 DOI: 10.1109/ojemb.2020.3036544
Source DB: PubMed Journal: IEEE Open J Eng Med Biol ISSN: 2644-1276