Literature DB >> 3922748

Sleep and epilepsy.

P Kellaway.   

Abstract

Epileptic mechanisms in the brain are subject to long-duration, time-ordered neuromodulatory processes controlled by endogenous oscillators which are responsible for appropriately phased modulation of various normal physiological processes, including the 24-h sleep/wakefulness cycle and the ultradian 100-min cycle of rapid eye movement/non-rapid eye movement sleep. Both focal and generalized types of epileptiform activity in humans are subject to biorhythmic modulation, and the various modulation patterns observed are in accord with a model which explains these patterns as a consequence of the interaction of two endogenous modulatory processes: one with a period of about 24 h, the other with a period of about 100 min. Differences in the phase angle between the two cyclic processes, determined by time of sleep onset, explain the various modulatory patterns observed. The mechanisms involved in the genesis and elaboration of electrical epileptiform activity in animal models are examined in relation to known processes involved in the physiology of sleep, and compared with data derived from long-term studies of the time distribution of epileptic events in humans. In infantile spasms, clinical seizure activity and the ictal and interictal EEG patterns in relationship to the phases of the sleep cycle, the significant defects in the quality and quantity of sleep in this disorder, and the changes that take place in all of these when seizures are abolished by effective treatment, suggest that pontine mechanisms responsible for the sleep cycle may be involved in the elaboration of infantile spasms and hypsarrhythmia.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  1985        PMID: 3922748     DOI: 10.1111/j.1528-1157.1985.tb05720.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Epilepsia        ISSN: 0013-9580            Impact factor:   5.864


  16 in total

1.  Corticothalamic inputs control the pattern of activity generated in thalamocortical networks.

Authors:  H Blumenfeld; D A McCormick
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2000-07-01       Impact factor: 6.167

2.  Autosomal dominant inheritance of centrotemporal sharp waves in rolandic epilepsy families.

Authors:  Bhavna Bali; Lewis L Kull; Lisa J Strug; Tara Clarke; Peregrine L Murphy; Cigdem I Akman; David A Greenberg; Deb K Pal
Journal:  Epilepsia       Date:  2007-07-28       Impact factor: 5.864

3.  High risk of reading disability and speech sound disorder in rolandic epilepsy families: case-control study.

Authors:  Tara Clarke; Lisa J Strug; Peregrine L Murphy; Bhavna Bali; Janessa Carvalho; Suzanne Foster; Geoffrey Tremont; Bernadine R Gagnon; Nelson Dorta; Deb K Pal
Journal:  Epilepsia       Date:  2007-09-10       Impact factor: 5.864

4.  Absence semiologies.

Authors:  Warren T Blume
Journal:  Epilepsy Curr       Date:  2009 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 7.500

Review 5.  Childhood epilepsy and sleep.

Authors:  Mohammed A Al-Biltagi
Journal:  World J Clin Pediatr       Date:  2014-08-08

6.  A thalamo-cortical neural mass model for the simulation of brain rhythms during sleep.

Authors:  F Cona; M Lacanna; M Ursino
Journal:  J Comput Neurosci       Date:  2014-01-09       Impact factor: 1.621

7.  Reactivation of seizure-related changes to interictal spike shape and synchrony during postseizure sleep in patients.

Authors:  Mark R Bower; Michal T Kucewicz; Erik K St Louis; Fredric B Meyer; W Richard Marsh; Matt Stead; Gregory A Worrell
Journal:  Epilepsia       Date:  2016-11-18       Impact factor: 5.864

8.  Synaptic and membrane mechanisms underlying synchronized oscillations in the ferret lateral geniculate nucleus in vitro.

Authors:  T Bal; M von Krosigk; D A McCormick
Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  1995-03-15       Impact factor: 5.182

9.  Bimodal ultradian seizure periodicity in human mesial temporal lobe epilepsy.

Authors:  Matthew Karafin; Erik K St Louis; M Bridget Zimmerman; Jon David Sparks; Mark A Granner
Journal:  Seizure       Date:  2010-06-26       Impact factor: 3.184

10.  Cellular and network mechanisms of genetically-determined absence seizures.

Authors:  Didier Pinault; Terence J O'Brien
Journal:  Thalamus Relat Syst       Date:  2007-01-22
View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.