Abstract

We investigated the changes of mismatch negativity (MMN) in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) and explored the possible role of MMN in lateralizing their seizure focus. Thirty patients with TLE and thirty healthy controls were included. MMN was elicited in each subject. Patients with TLE were divided into three subgroups: unilateral left TLE; unilateral right TLE, and bilateral TLE. MMN amplitudes and latencies were compared between the patients with TLE and the control group, and also among the three subgroups of TLE, using repeated measures analyses of variance (ANOVA). To assess the lateralizing value of MMN, MMN latencies and amplitudes at the mastoid sites between the ipsilateral and contralateral sides of epileptic focus in patients with unilateral TLE were compared using t-test. Compared with controls, each subgroup of patients with TLE had longer latencies of MMN at both fronto-central and mastoid sites, but the amplitudes of MMN were not significantly different. The amplitudes and latencies of MMN were not significantly different between the ipsilateral and contralateral sides of seizure focus at mastoid sites. The present findings of prolonged latencies of MMN are suggestive of cognitive impairment in TLE. Both the mastoid sites and the fronto-central sites are involved, which likely reflect widespread cortical abnormalities in TLE. However, the changes of MMN during the interictal phase are not useful for lateralizing the seizure focus in patients with TLE.

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