Abstract

Patients with medically-refractory focal epilepsy may be candidates for neurosurgery and some may require placement of intracranial EEG electrodes to localise seizure onset. Assessing cerebral responses to single pulse electrical stimulation (SPES) may give diagnostically useful data. SPES produces cortico-cortical evoked potentials (CCEPs), which infer effective brain connectivity. Diffusion-weighted images and tractography may be used to estimate structural brain connectivity. This combination provides the opportunity to observe seizure onset and its propagation throughout the brain, spreading contiguously along the cortex explored with electrodes, or non-contiguously. We analysed CCEPs and diffusion tractography in seven focal epilepsy patients and reconstructed the effective and structural brain networks. We aimed to assess the inter-modal similarity of the networks at a large scale across the cortex, the effective and structural connectivity of the ictal-onset zone, and investigate potential mechanisms of non-contiguous seizure spread. We found a significant overlap between structural and effective networks. Effective network CCEP amplitude, baseline variation, and outward connectivity was higher at ictal-onset zones, while structural connection strength within the ictal-onset zone tended to be higher. These findings support the concept of hyperexcitable cortex being associated with seizure generation. The high prevalence of structural and effective connections from the ictal-onset zone to sites of non-contiguous spread suggests that macroscopic structural and effective connections are plausible routes for non-contiguous seizure spread.

Highlights

  • Focal epileptic seizures comprise localised areas of abnormal electrical activity which can subsequently spread to contiguous and noncontiguous brain areas

  • We found a high degree of overlap between structural and effective networks, altered structural and effective connectivity of the ictal-onset zone, and evidence of structural and effective connections underlying non-contiguous seizure spread

  • Some correlation in connection weights may be expected as the density of connecting fibers may correspond to the number and synchrony of neurons activated at the remote site, which is directly proportional to cortical evoked potentials (CCEPs) peak amplitude

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Summary

Introduction

Focal epileptic seizures comprise localised areas of abnormal electrical activity which can subsequently spread to contiguous and noncontiguous brain areas. Intracranial EEG recordings may demonstrate spread of seizure activity between non-contiguous areas (Duchowny et al, 2000; Turkdogan et al, 2005), ipsilateral or contralateral to the ictal-onset zone (Blume et al, 2001; Baumgartner et al, 1996; Lieb et al, 1987). It is unknown whether non-contiguous seizure spread may occur via direct cortico-cortical connection or indirectly via other cortical or subcortical sites

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