| Literature DB >> 34899205 |
Thato Mary Mokhothu1, Kazumasa Zen Tanaka1.
Abstract
Temporal Lobe Epilepsy (TLE) is a neurological condition characterized by focal brain hyperexcitability, resulting in abnormal neuronal discharge and uncontrollable seizures. The hippocampus, with its inherently highly synchronized firing patterns and relatively high excitability, is prone to epileptic seizures, and it is usually the focus of TLE. Researchers have identified hippocampal high-frequency oscillations (HFOs) as a salient feature in people with TLE and animal models of this disease, arising before or at the onset of the epileptic event. To a certain extent, these pathological HFOs have served as a marker and a potential target for seizure attenuation using electrical or optogenetic interventions. However, many questions remain about whether we can reliably distinguish pathological from non-pathological HFOs and whether they can tell us about the development of the disease. While this would be an arduous task to perform in humans, animal models of TLE provide an excellent opportunity to study the characteristics of HFOs in predicting how epilepsy evolves. This minireview will (1) summarize what we know about the oscillatory disruption in TLE, (2) summarize knowledge about oscillatory changes in the latent period and their role in predicting seizures, and (3) propose future studies essential to uncovering potential treatments based on early detection of pathological HFOs.Entities:
Keywords: biomarkers; high-frequency oscillations; hippocampus; latent period; pathological oscillations; seizures; temporal lobe epilepsy
Year: 2021 PMID: 34899205 PMCID: PMC8656355 DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2021.785328
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Behav Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5153 Impact factor: 3.558
FIGURE 1Pathological HFOs and their possible role during the latent phase of TLE. (Left) SWRs as an example of non-pathological HFOs. In the hippocampus, HFOs (80–200 Hz) called ripples are associated with high amplitude activities (Sharp Wave Ripples, SWRs) and contribute to neuronal plasticity and memory consolidation. (Right) Pathological HFOs during the latent phase of TLE. Higher frequencies of oscillations (200–500 Hz) are observed between the acute and chronic stages without behavioral expression of seizures. Neuronal activities leading to the pathological HFOs are suggested to result in long-term molecular and cellular changes. Circuit rewiring caused by these changes might make the more brain areas prone to SRSs, leading to further progression of TLE.
Studies evaluating pathological HFOs (pHFOs) in the epileptogenic regions.
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| Rats (KA), Humans | Hippocampus (CA1, DG), Entorhinal cortex | Depth electrodes, microelectrodes | Fast ripples (250–500 Hz) were only found in the hippocampus of KA-treated rats and epileptic humans; fast ripples are defined as pathologic. |
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| Humans | Hippocampus, Entorhinal cortex | Depth electrodes | More HFOs were detected in the hippocampal sites ipsilateral to onset location compared to contralateral sites. |
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| Humans | Temporal, frontal lobe | Video-EEG during sleep and wakefulness | pHFOs found in seizure onset zones and could predict onset within a specific timeframe in neocortical epilepsy. |
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| Humans | Various: Amygdala; Entorhinal cortex; Frontal anterior; Frontal lobe; Frontal posterior; Hippocampus; Mesial temporal lobe; Perirhinal cortex; Temporal basal anterior; Temporal basal posterior; Temporal depth frontal; Temporal depth lateral | iEEG | Location of pHFOs overlapped with the location of onset. |
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| Humans | Hippocampus, amygdala | Depth electrodes | Ripples were more prominent in epileptic rather than non-epileptic brains. Higher frequencies were observed near sclerotic tissue. |
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| Humans | Temporal, frontal lobe | iEEG | Pre-ictal and inter-ictal HFOs can in some cases be differentiated, and changes in the frequency of the HFOs can be used as predictors of seizures. |
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| Rats (low-calcium ACSF perfusion of slices) | Hippocampus (CA1) | Glass pipettes, extracellular field potentials | HFOs build up before the seizure onset. |
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| Rats (KA), Computer simulations | Hippocampus (DG, CA1, CA3), computational models | Silicon probes, computational models | Populations spikes and emergent spikes cause fast ripples, region-specific differences in synchronicity during HFOs. |
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| Rats (Pilocarpine) | Hippocampus (CA1), Entorhinal cortex | Depth electrodes | pHFO dynamics and distribution changes during latency and chronic stage, inter-ictal spikes change before and after the first spontaneous seizure. |
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| Mice (KA) | Hippocampus (CA1, DG) | Glass pipettes and silicon probes | pHFOs begin in the early latent period in CA1, and the majority are observed in DG. Peak amplitudes increase with epileptogenesis. |
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| Rats (KA) | Hippocampus (CA1) | LFP and single-unit recordings with tetrodes | pHFOs found only in epileptic brains independent of brain state and are associated with inter-ictal spikes. |