| Literature DB >> 34296164 |
Stephen Meisenhelter1, Robert J Quon2, Sarah A Steimel2, Markus E Testorf3, Edward J Camp1, Payam Moein1, George W Culler1, Robert E Gross4, Bradley C Lega5, Michael R Sperling6, Michael J Kahana7, Barbara C Jobst1.
Abstract
The factors that control the occurrence of interictal epileptiform discharges (IEDs) are not well understood. We suspected that this phenomenon reflects an attention-dependent suppression of interictal epileptiform activity. We hypothesized that IEDs would occur less frequently when a subject viewed a task-relevant stimulus compared with viewing a blank screen. Furthermore, IEDs have been shown to impair memory when they occur in certain regions during the encoding or recall phases of a memory task. Although these discharges have a short duration, their impact on memory suggests that they have longer lasting electrophysiological effects. We found that IEDs were associated with an increase in low-frequency power and a change in the balance between low- and high-frequency oscillations for several seconds. We found that the occurrence of IEDs is modified by whether a subject is attending to a word displayed on screen or is observing a blank screen. In addition, we found that discharges in brain regions in every lobe impair memory. These findings elucidate the relationship between IEDs and memory impairment and reveal the task dependence of the occurrence of IEDs.Entities:
Keywords: attention; cognition; epilepsy; interictal epileptiform discharge; memory
Year: 2021 PMID: 34296164 PMCID: PMC8152941 DOI: 10.1093/texcom/tgab019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cereb Cortex Commun ISSN: 2632-7376
Figure 1Overview of task and analysis technique. (A) Subjects completed a free recall task. In each trial, a series of 12 words were presented on a computer screen. Subjects then completed simple math problems for 20 s as a distractor. Subjects were then prompted to verbally recall words that they remembered from the current trial. (B) IEDs were detected within the intracranial EEG recordings, and brain activity surrounding each IED was analyzed. Changes in power were calculated by comparing the period from 2 to 1 s before the IED onset (pre-IED) to the period from 1 to 2 s after the IED onset (post-IED).
Subject demographics
| Number of subjects | 307 |
|---|---|
| Female | 147 (47.9%) |
| Age distribution | |
| 18–19 | 7 (2.3%) |
| 20–29 | 91 (29.6%) |
| 30–39 | 93 (30.3%) |
| 40–49 | 69 (22.5%) |
| 50–59 | 38 (12.4%) |
| 60–69 | 9 (2.9%) |
| Age of seizure onset | 17.2 ± 12.7 |
| Years of education | 13.7 ± 2.3 |
| Left handed | 32 (10.4%) |
| Number of channels | 126.1 ± 41.2 |
| Electrode types | |
| Depth | 287 (93.5%) |
| Strips or grids | 109 (35.5%) |
| Prior resection | 47 (15.3%) |
| Sessions completed | |
| 1 | 49 (16.0%) |
| 2 | 71 (23.1%) |
| 3 | 93 (30.3%) |
| 4 | 46 (15.0%) |
| 5+ | 48 (15.6%) |
| Seizure onset zone | |
| Focal | 61 (19.9%) |
| Multifocal | 93 (30.3%) |
| Not recorded | 153 (49.8%) |
Figure 2IED occurrence decreases during word presentation compared with periods when the screen is blank. During the encoding phase of the free recall task, subjects were presented with a series of words to remember, with each word separated by a brief gap in which the screen was blank. (A) The occurrence of IEDs was analyzed by cortical region during the gap and word periods. Regions in which we recorded from fewer than 15 subjects are shown in dark gray. Areas that were analyzed but had no significant change in IED rate are shown in white. All other regions are significant at P < 0.05. More intense colors indicate a larger effect size. (B) We also grouped regions by lobe. IED occurred less often in all lobes while a word was onscreen.
Figure 3IEDs are associated with increased low-frequency band power and changes in spectral tilt. (A) The increase in low-frequency power is more pronounced in channels in which the IED was detected; 95% CI bounds are shown for channels in which an IED was detected, channels in which an IED was not detected but occurred elsewhere, and randomly selected segments of data from time periods in which IEDs were not detected anywhere. (B) Spectral tilt is calculated by computing the slope of the power spectrum on a log–log scale. A decrease in spectral tilt corresponds with an increase in low-frequency power compared with high-frequency power. An increase corresponds to a decrease in low-frequency power compared with high-frequency power. (C) After an IED, spectral tilt decreases in several brain regions when the IED is detected in that region. Dark gray areas were not analyzed due to insufficient data. Regions that were analyzed but did not have a significant (P < 0.05) change are shown in white. (D) We additionally analyzed spectral tilt by lobe to boost statistical power. There was a significant decrease in spectral tilt in every lobe except the occipital lobe and the left cingulate and parietal lobes. Due to the increase in statistical power gained by grouping together several regions, spectral tilt changes significantly at the lobe level but not at the region level in some cases.
Figure 4IEDs occur during periods of decreased spectral tilt and are associated with further increases in low-frequency power. (A) Changes in post-IED power last several seconds. The pre-IED power was compared against post-IED power computed from a sliding 1 s window. The rise in band power in the lower frequencies decreases over the course of several seconds. (B) Pre-IED power was compared with periods of ECoG that were at least 4 s from an IED from the same channel and trial. IEDs occurred during periods of increased low-frequency power and decreased high-frequency power compared with non-IED periods. This finding is consistent across various task epochs and nontask periods.
Figure 5IEDs during memory encoding are associated with decreased recall. (A) The probability of recalling a word presented during the encoding phase was modeled with the number of IEDs that occurred as a regressor. IED occurring in several regions throughout the brain, especially in the temporal lobes, significantly decreased the odds of successful recall. Dark gray areas were not analyzed. Regions that were analyzed but did not have a significant (P < 0.05) change are shown in white. (B) We also grouped the regions by lobe. Compared with (Horak et al. 2017), we found additional areas in the frontal lobe in which IEDs are linked to poor memory performance.