Literature DB >> 9771751

Epileptic seizures can be anticipated by non-linear analysis.

J Martinerie1, C Adam, M Le Van Quyen, M Baulac, S Clemenceau, B Renault, F J Varela.   

Abstract

Epileptic seizures are a principal brain dysfunction with important public health implications, as they affect 0.8% of humans. Many of these patients (20%) are resistant to treatment with drugs. The ability to anticipate the onset of seizures in such cases would permit clinical interventions. The view of chronic focal epilepsy now is that abnormally discharging neurons act as pacemakers to recruit and entrain other normal neurons by loss of inhibition and synchronization into a critical mass. Thus, preictal changes should be detectable during the stages of recruitment. Traditional signal analyses, such as the count of focal spike density, the frequency coherence or spectral analyses are not reliable predictors. Non-linear indicators may undergo consistent changes around seizure onset. Our objective was to follow the transition into seizure by reconstructing intracranial recordings in implanted patients as trajectories in a phase space and then introduce non-linear indicators to characterize them. These indicators take into account the extended spatio-temporal nature of the epileptic recruitment processes and the corresponding physiological events governed by short-term causalities in the time series. We demonstrate that in most cases (17 of 19), seizure onset could be anticipated well in advance (between 2-6 minutes beforehand), and that all subjects seemed to share a similar 'route' towards seizure.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1998        PMID: 9771751     DOI: 10.1038/2667

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nat Med        ISSN: 1078-8956            Impact factor:   53.440


  53 in total

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2.  Synchrony in normal and focal epileptic brain: the seizure onset zone is functionally disconnected.

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6.  Discriminating preictal and interictal states in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy using wavelet analysis of intracerebral EEG.

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7.  Complexity measures of brain wave dynamics.

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8.  State-dependent precursors of seizures in correlation-based functional networks of electrocorticograms of patients with temporal lobe epilepsy.

Authors:  Hirokazu Takahashi; Shuhei Takahashi; Ryohei Kanzaki; Kensuke Kawai
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9.  Seizure detection using the phase-slope index and multichannel ECoG.

Authors:  Puneet Rana; John Lipor; Hyong Lee; Wim van Drongelen; Michael H Kohrman; Barry Van Veen
Journal:  IEEE Trans Biomed Eng       Date:  2012-01-18       Impact factor: 4.538

10.  Decreased neuronal synchronization during experimental seizures.

Authors:  Theoden I Netoff; Steven J Schiff
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2002-08-15       Impact factor: 6.167

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