Abstract

ObjectivesImaging and neurophysiological data shows that the cortical disfunction caused by focal epilepsy is not limited to the epileptic focus, thus raising the modern vision of focal epilepsy as a network disorder. The involvement of deep thalamo-cortical projections in temporal lobe epilepsy is a clear example. We aimed at demonstrating the interictal functional impairment of thalamo-cortical network in drug-naïve TLE patients through the study of high frequency oscillations of somatosensory evoked potentials (HF-SEP). MethodsTwelve healthy controls (HC; 8 females, 52.2 ± 17.3 years-old) and 12 drug-naïve TLE patients (8 females, 55.5 ± 21.5 years-old) underwent bilateral median HF-SEP, recorded by scalp electrodes. Cp3′-Fz and Cp4′-Fz traces were filtered (400–800 Hz) to evidence HF-SEP. ResultsHF-SEP duration in the affected hemisphere was significantly longer when compared to that of both the unaffected hemisphere and HC hemispheres. No significant inter-hemispheric differences were found in areas, powers and latencies of HF-SEP wavelets. ConclusionOur results demonstrate that TLE induces early interictal functional impairments of the thalamo-cortical network. SignificanceOur data strongly corroborates the vision of focal epilepsy as a network disorder and offers a new neurophysiological tool to test pharmacological, surgical and neuromodulatory therapies.

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