Abstract

Auditory processing abnormalities in temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) were assessed by investigating mismatch negativity (MMN) in a group of 20 TLE patients and 20 healthy control subjects. MMN is an event-related potential (ERP) component that reflects pre-attentive sensory memory function. A passive oddball paradigm using frequency changes in sinusoidal tones was employed to evoke MMN. MMN at frontocentral sites was enhanced in TLE patients relative to controls, while mismatch signals at mastoid sites (i.e., mismatch positivity; MMP) did not differ between the two groups. In the MMP temporal range, greater positivity at mastoid sites in response to standard stimuli was observed in TLE patients than in controls. Both MMN and MMP were significantly delayed in the TLE group. These findings demonstrate that TLE patients have impaired pre-attentive processing of pure-tone sounds. Enhanced frontocentral MMN may reflect hyperexcitability of the frontal lobes in compensation for dysfunction of the temporal lobes. Larger positivity at the mastoids in response to standard stimuli may be attributed to poor neuronal adaptation in the temporal lobe. Taken together, results suggest that evaluation of MMN/P is a useful physiological tool for identifying pre-attentive auditory memory dysfunction in TLE.

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