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1.
Clin Neurophysiol ; 162: 210-218, 2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38643614

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Focal cortical dysplasias (FCD) are characterized by distinct interictal spike patterns and high frequency oscillations (HFOs; ripples: 80-250 Hz; fast ripples: 250-500 Hz) in the intra-operative electrocorticogram (ioECoG). We studied the temporal relation between intra-operative spikes and HFOs and their relation to resected tissue in people with FCD with a favorable outcome. METHODS: We included patients who underwent ioECoG-tailored epilepsy surgery with pathology confirmed FCD and long-term Engel 1A outcome. Spikes and HFOs were automatically detected and visually checked in 1-minute pre-resection-ioECoG. Channels covering resected and non-resected tissue were compared using a logistic mixed model, assessing event numbers, co-occurrence ratios, and time-based properties. RESULTS: We found pre-resection spikes, ripples in respectively 21 and 20 out of 22 patients. Channels covering resected tissue showed high numbers of spikes and HFOs, and high ratios of co-occurring events. Spikes, especially with ripples, have a relatively sharp rising flank with a long descending flank and early ripple onset over resected tissue. CONCLUSIONS: A combined analysis of event numbers, ratios, and temporal relationships between spikes and HFOs may aid identifying epileptic tissue in epilepsy surgery. SIGNIFICANCE: This study shows a promising method for clinically relevant properties of events, closely associated with FCD.


Subject(s)
Electrocorticography , Intraoperative Neurophysiological Monitoring , Malformations of Cortical Development , Humans , Female , Male , Adult , Adolescent , Malformations of Cortical Development/physiopathology , Malformations of Cortical Development/surgery , Electrocorticography/methods , Young Adult , Intraoperative Neurophysiological Monitoring/methods , Child , Middle Aged , Epilepsy/physiopathology , Epilepsy/surgery , Epilepsy/diagnosis , Brain Waves/physiology , Child, Preschool , Action Potentials/physiology , Electroencephalography/methods , Focal Cortical Dysplasia
2.
bioRxiv ; 2024 Jan 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38260687

ABSTRACT

Human brain connectivity can be measured in different ways. Intracranial EEG (iEEG) measurements during single pulse electrical stimulation provide a unique way to assess the spread of electrical information with millisecond precision. To provide a robust workflow to process these cortico-cortical evoked potential (CCEP) data and detect early evoked responses in a fully automated and reproducible fashion, we developed Early Response (ER)-detect. ER-detect is an open-source Python package and Docker application to preprocess BIDS structured iEEG data and detect early evoked CCEP responses. ER-detect can use three response detection methods, which were validated against 14-manually annotated CCEP datasets from two different sites by four independent raters. Results showed that ER-detect's automated detection performed on par with the inter-rater reliability (Cohen's Kappa of ~0.6). Moreover, ER-detect was optimized for processing large CCEP datasets, to be used in conjunction with other connectomic investigations. ER-detect provides a highly efficient standardized workflow such that iEEG-BIDS data can be processed in a consistent manner and enhance the reproducibility of CCEP based connectivity results.

3.
Nat Neurosci ; 26(4): 537-541, 2023 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36894655

ABSTRACT

The structure of the human connectome develops from childhood throughout adolescence to middle age, but how these structural changes affect the speed of neuronal signaling is not well described. In 74 subjects, we measured the latency of cortico-cortical evoked responses across association and U-fibers and calculated their corresponding transmission speeds. Decreases in conduction delays until at least 30 years show that the speed of neuronal communication develops well into adulthood.


Subject(s)
Connectome , White Matter , Middle Aged , Adolescent , Humans , Child , Brain/physiology , Neurons , Signal Transduction
4.
Neuroinformatics ; 20(3): 727-736, 2022 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35244855

ABSTRACT

The neuroscience community increasingly uses the Brain Imaging Data Structure (BIDS) to organize data, extending from MRI to electrophysiology data. While automated tools and workflows are developed that help organize MRI data from the scanner to BIDS, these workflows are lacking for clinical intracranial EEG (iEEG data). We present a practical workflow on how to organize full clinical iEEG epilepsy data into BIDS. We present electrophysiological datasets recorded from twelve subjects who underwent intracranial monitoring followed by resective epilepsy surgery at the University Medical Center Utrecht, the Netherlands, and became seizure-free after surgery. These data include intraoperative electrocorticography recordings from six patients, long-term electrocorticography recordings from three patients and stereo-encephalography recordings from three patients. We describe the 6 steps in the pipeline that are essential to structure the data from these clinical iEEG recordings into BIDS and the challenges during this process. These proposed workflow enable centers performing clinical iEEG recordings to structure their data to improve accessibility, reusability and interoperability of clinical data.


Subject(s)
Electrocorticography , Epilepsy , Humans , Electrocorticography/methods , Electroencephalography/methods , Epilepsy/diagnostic imaging , Epilepsy/surgery , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Workflow
5.
J Neural Eng ; 17(6)2020 11 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33086212

ABSTRACT

Objective. A 'Virtual resection' consists of computationally simulating the effect of an actual resection on the brain. We validated two functional connectivity based virtual resection methods with the actual connectivity measured using post-resection intraoperative recordings.Approach. A non-linear association index was applied to pre-resection recordings from 11 extra-temporal focal epilepsy patients. We computed two virtual resection strategies: first, a 'naive' one obtained by simply removing from the connectivity matrix the electrodes that were resected; second, a virtual resection with partialization accounting for the influence of resected electrodes on not-resected electrodes. We validated the virtual resections with two analysis: (1) we tested with a Kolmogorov-Smirnov test if the distributions of connectivity values after the virtual resections differed from the actual post-resection connectivity distribution; (2) we tested if the overall effect of the resection measured by contrasting pre-resection and post-resection connectivity values is detectable with the virtual resection approach using a Kolmogorv-Smirnov test.Main results. The estimation of post-resection connectivity values did not succeed for both methods. In the second analysis, the naive method failed completely to detect the effect found between pre-resection and post-resection connectivity distributions, while the partialization method agreed with post-resection measurements in detecting a drop connectivity compared to pre-resection recordings. Our findings suggest that the partialization technique is superior to the naive method in detecting the overall effect after the resection.Significance. We pointed out how a realistic validation based on actual post-resection recordings reveals that virtual resection methods are not yet mature to inform the clinical decision-making.


Subject(s)
Drug Resistant Epilepsy , Epilepsies, Partial , Epilepsy , Brain , Brain Mapping/methods , Electrocorticography/methods , Epilepsy/surgery , Humans
6.
Sci Rep ; 10(1): 14654, 2020 09 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32887896

ABSTRACT

Signal analysis biomarkers, in an intra-operative setting, may be complementary tools to guide and tailor the resection in drug-resistant focal epilepsy patients. Effective assessment of biomarker performances are needed to evaluate their clinical usefulness and translation. We defined a realistic ground-truth scenario and compared the effectiveness of different biomarkers alone and combined to localize epileptogenic tissue during surgery. We investigated the performances of univariate, bivariate and multivariate signal biomarkers applied to 1 min inter-ictal intra-operative electrocorticography to discriminate between epileptogenic and non-epileptogenic locations in 47 drug-resistant people with epilepsy (temporal and extra-temporal) who had been seizure-free one year after the operation. The best result using a single biomarker was obtained using the phase-amplitude coupling measure for which the epileptogenic tissue was localized in 17 out of 47 patients. Combining the whole set of biomarkers provided an improvement of the performances: 27 out of 47 patients. Repeating the analysis only on the temporal-lobe resections we detected the epileptogenic tissue in 29 out of 30 combining all the biomarkers. We suggest that the assessment of biomarker performances on a ground-truth scenario is required to have a proper estimate on how biomarkers translate into clinical use. Phase-amplitude coupling seems the best performing single biomarker and combining biomarkers improves localization of epileptogenic tissue. Performance achieved is not adequate as a tool in the operation theater yet, but it can improve the understanding of pathophysiological process.


Subject(s)
Drug Resistant Epilepsy/physiopathology , Drug Resistant Epilepsy/surgery , Electrocorticography/methods , Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe/physiopathology , Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe/surgery , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Biomarkers , Child , Child, Preschool , Drug Resistant Epilepsy/epidemiology , Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe/epidemiology , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Netherlands/epidemiology , Retrospective Studies , Seizures/physiopathology , Temporal Lobe/physiopathology , Temporal Lobe/surgery , Young Adult
7.
Brain Topogr ; 32(3): 405-417, 2019 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30523480

ABSTRACT

The growing interest in brain networks to study the brain's function in cognition and diseases has produced an increase in methods to extract these networks. Typically, each method yields a different network. Therefore, one may ask what the resulting networks represent. To address this issue we consider electrocorticography (ECoG) data where we compare three methods. We derive networks from on-going ECoG data using two traditional methods: cross-correlation (CC) and Granger causality (GC). Next, connectivity is probed actively using single pulse electrical stimulation (SPES). We compare the overlap in connectivity between these three methods as well as their ability to reveal well-known anatomical connections in the language circuit. We find that strong connections in the CC network form more or less a subset of the SPES network. GC and SPES are related more weakly, although GC connections coincide more frequently with SPES connections compared to non-existing SPES connections. Connectivity between the two major hubs in the language circuit, Broca's and Wernicke's area, is only found in SPES networks. Our results are of interest for the use of patient-specific networks obtained from ECoG. In epilepsy research, such networks form the basis for methods that predict the effect of epilepsy surgery. For this application SPES networks are interesting as they disclose more physiological connections compared to CC and GC networks.


Subject(s)
Brain/physiopathology , Electrocorticography/methods , Epilepsies, Partial/physiopathology , Brain Mapping/methods , Electric Stimulation/methods , Epilepsies, Partial/surgery , Humans , Language , Neural Pathways/physiopathology
9.
Hum Brain Mapp ; 39(11): 4611-4622, 2018 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30030947

ABSTRACT

We investigated effective networks constructed from single pulse electrical stimulation (SPES) in epilepsy patients who underwent intracranial electrocorticography. Using graph analysis, we compared network characteristics of tissue within and outside the epileptogenic area. In 21 patients with subdural electrode grids (1 cm interelectrode distance), we constructed a binary, directional network derived from SPES early responses (<100 ms). We calculated in-degree, out-degree, betweenness centrality, the percentage of bidirectional, receiving and activating connections, and the percentage of connections toward the (non-)epileptogenic tissue for each node in the network. We analyzed whether these network measures were significantly different in seizure onset zone (SOZ)-electrodes compared to non-SOZ electrodes, in resected area (RA)-electrodes compared to non-RA electrodes, and in seizure free compared to not seizure-free patients. Electrodes in the SOZ/RA showed significantly higher values for in-degree and out-degree, both at group level, and at patient level, and more so in seizure-free patients. These differences were not observed for betweenness centrality. There were also more bidirectional and fewer receiving connections in the SOZ/RA in seizure-free patients. It appears that the SOZ/RA is densely connected with itself, with only little input arriving from non-SOZ/non-RA electrodes. These results suggest that meso-scale effective network measures are different in epileptogenic compared to normal brain tissue. Local connections within the SOZ/RA are increased and the SOZ/RA is relatively isolated from the surrounding cortex. This offers the prospect of enhanced prediction of epilepsy-prone brain areas using SPES.


Subject(s)
Brain Mapping/methods , Brain/physiopathology , Electric Stimulation , Electrocorticography , Epilepsy/physiopathology , Adolescent , Adult , Brain/surgery , Child , Child, Preschool , Electric Stimulation/methods , Electrocorticography/methods , Epilepsy/surgery , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Models, Theoretical , Neural Pathways/physiopathology , Neural Pathways/surgery , Young Adult
10.
Epilepsy Res ; 141: 95-101, 2018 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29547789

ABSTRACT

The aim of this review is to evaluate whether open-loop or closed-loop neocortical electrical stimulation should be the preferred approach to manage seizures in intractable epilepsy. Twenty cases of open-loop neocortical stimulation with an implanted device have been reported, in 5 case studies. Closed-loop stimulation with an implanted device has been investigated in a larger number of patients in the RNS System clinical trials. With 230 patients enrolled at the start of the Long-term Treatment Trial, 115 remained at the last reported follow-up. Open-loop stimulation reduced seizure frequency in patients on average with over 90% compared to baseline. Closed-loop stimulation reduces seizure frequency with 60%-65%. Even though open-loop neocortical electrical stimulation has only been reported in 20 patients, and closed-loop in much a larger sample, evidence suggests that both approaches are effective in reducing seizures. It remains an open question which should be clinically preferred. Therefore, a head-to-head adaptive clinical study comparing both approaches is proposed.


Subject(s)
Deep Brain Stimulation/methods , Epilepsy/therapy , Neocortex/physiology , Nerve Net/physiology , Adolescent , Adult , Child , Electrodes, Implanted , Electroencephalography , Epilepsy/psychology , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , PubMed , Quality of Life , Young Adult
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