Abstract

Patients with epilepsy frequently experience autonomic dysfunction and impaired cerebral autoregulation. The present study investigates autonomic function and cerebral autoregulation in patients with epilepsy to determine whether these factors contribute to impaired autoregulation. A total of 81 patients with epilepsy and 45 healthy controls were evaluated, assessing their sudomotor, cardiovagal, and adrenergic functions using a battery of autonomic nervous system (ANS) function tests, including the deep breathing, Valsalva maneuver, head-up tilting, and Q-sweat tests. Cerebral autoregulation was measured by transcranial Doppler examination during the breath-holding test, the Valsalva maneuver, and the head-up tilting test. Autonomic functions were impaired during the interictal period in patients with epilepsy compared to healthy controls. The three indices of cerebral autoregulation—the breath-holding index (BHI), an autoregulation index calculated in phase II of the Valsalva maneuver (ASI), and cerebrovascular resistance measured in the second minute during the head-up tilting test (CVR2-min)—all decreased in patients with epilepsy. ANS dysfunction correlated significantly with impairment of cerebral autoregulation (measured by BHI, ASI, and CVR2-min), suggesting that the increased autonomic dysfunction in patients with epilepsy may augment the dysregulation of cerebral blood flow. Long-term epilepsy, a high frequency of seizures, and refractory epilepsy, particularly temporal lobe epilepsy, may contribute to advanced autonomic dysfunction and impaired cerebral autoregulation. These results have implications for therapeutic interventions that aim to correct central autonomic dysfunction and impairment of cerebral autoregulation, particularly in patients at high risk for sudden, unexplained death in epilepsy.

Highlights

  • IntroductionThe interactions between the autonomic nervous system (ANS) and epileptic seizures are extraordinarily complicated in patients with epilepsy [2,3,4]

  • In a comparison of the autonomic function scores and the cerebral autoregulation indices (BHI, Autoregulatory Index for Phase II (ASI), and CVR2-min ) between right and left lateralized temporal lobe epilepsy using the Mann–Whitney U test, the results showed no significant difference between autonomic function and cerebral autoregulation (p > 0.005)

  • Using three cerebral autoregulation indices measured by a transcranial Doppler (TCD) monitor, including breath-holding index (BHI), ASI, and CVR2-min, cerebral autoregulation was shown to be more significantly impaired in patients with epilepsy than in the control subjects

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Summary

Introduction

The interactions between the autonomic nervous system (ANS) and epileptic seizures are extraordinarily complicated in patients with epilepsy [2,3,4]. Seizures involving the propagation of abnormal neuronal electrical activities may interact with the ANS through central autonomic centers, and may participate in the regulation of autonomic activity [2,4,5]. The effects of epileptic discharge on the ANS through the cortical, limbic, and hypothalamic systems have been suggested [2,4,5]. Patients with epilepsy frequently manifest autonomic dysfunction, which may involve the cardiovascular, respiratory, gastrointestinal, genial, urinary, and coetaneous systems [2,3,4,6,7]

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