Literature DB >> 9216479

Electrocortical and behavioral responses produced by acute electrical stimulation of the human centromedian thalamic nucleus.

M Velasco1, F Velasco, A L Velasco, F Brito, F Jiménez, I Marquez, B Rojas.   

Abstract

Incremental, desynchronizing and spike-wave electrocortical responses and concomitant symptoms to acute electrical stimulation of the centromedian thalamic nucleus (CM) were studied in 12 patients with intractable complex partial and tonic-clonic generalized seizures. Low-frequency (6/s), 320-800 microA stimulation of the caudal-basal and central portions of CM elicited incremental recruiting and augmenting-like responses with a bilateral regional scalp distribution, with emphasis at the ipsilateral frontal (recruiting) and central (augmenting) regions, while ventral-basal CM stimulation elicited primary-like responses with a focal distribution at the ipsilateral parietal region. High-frequency (60/s), 320-800 microA stimulation of caudal-basal and central, but not ventral-basal CM, elicited EEG desynchronization and a slow negative shift of the EEG baseline with scalp distribution similar to that showed by recruiting- and augmenting-like responses. Neither incremental nor desynchronization EEG responses were accompanied by evident patient sensory or motor responses. Low-frequency (3/s), high-intensity (30 V = 2400 microA) combined stimulation of the right CM and left non-specific mesencephalic ascending pathways elicited a response similar to the typical absence attack with all EEG and clinical ingredients: S1, S2, P1 and W components of the individual spike-wave complex and generalized spike-wave discharges followed by sleep spindle EEG afterdischarges, accompanied by motionless stare, 3/s eye blinking, lip smacking and total failure to respond to visual stimuli in patients under a simple responding task.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9216479     DOI: 10.1016/s0013-4694(96)95203-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Electroencephalogr Clin Neurophysiol        ISSN: 0013-4694


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Review 10.  Neurostimulation as a promising epilepsy therapy.

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