在人类癫痫中,间峰和皮层诱发电位具有共同的时空限制。

IF 3
Frontiers in network physiology Pub Date : 2025-05-30 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fnetp.2025.1602124
Samuel B Tomlinson, Patrick Davis, Caren Armstrong, Michael E Baumgartner, Benjamin C Kennedy, Eric D Marsh
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引用次数: 0

摘要

癫痫样间期放电(IEDs)是癫痫的病理特征,它经常出现并通过功能连接的脑区域网络传播。最近的研究表明,通过重复放电传播IED对大脑区域的顺序招募是高度保守的,这表明IED的传播在时空上受到潜在癫痫网络特征的限制。了解重复IED序列如何与癫痫网络的时空组织相关,可能会揭示IED在癫痫发生过程中的病理生理作用。外源性电流的输送允许对癫痫网络电路进行直接实验探测,并与自发性癫痫样活动(例如,ied)进行关联。在这项针对难治性癫痫患者的初步研究中,我们通过侵入性深度电极进行皮层刺激,以测试自发性癫痫发作时观察到的时空模式是否会被皮层诱发电位再现。我们发现,刺激早激活的“上游”IED区域(逆行)诱发电位增强,刺激晚激活的“下游”IED区域(逆行)诱发电位减弱。IED潜伏期和诱发电位之间的一致性表明,这些不同的网络现象在人类癫痫大脑中具有共同的时空限制。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Interictal spikes and evoked cortical potentials share common spatiotemporal constraints in human epilepsy.

Interictal epileptiform discharges (IEDs) are pathologic hallmarks of epilepsy which frequently arise and spread through networks of functionally-connected brain regions. Recent studies demonstrate that the sequential recruitment of brain regions by propagating IEDs is highly conserved across repeated discharges, suggesting that IED propagation is spatiotemporally constrained by features of the underlying epileptic network. Understanding how repetitive IED sequences relate to the spatiotemporal organization of the epileptic network may reveal key insights into the pathophysiological role of IEDs during epileptogenesis. Delivery of exogenous electrical current allows for direct experimental probing of epileptic network circuitry and correlation with spontaneous epileptiform activity (e.g., IEDs). In this pilot study of human subjects with refractory epilepsy, we performed cortical stimulation via invasive depth electrodes to test whether spatiotemporal patterns observed during spontaneous IEDs are reproduced by evoked cortical potentials. We found that evoked potentials were accentuated following stimulation of early-activating "upstream" IED regions (anterograde) and attenuated with stimulation of late-activating "downstream" IED regions (retrograde). Concordance between IED latencies and evoked potentials suggests that these distinct network phenomena share common spatiotemporal constraints in the human epileptic brain.

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