Objective: Drowsiness has been implicated in the modulation of centro-temporal spikes (CTS) in Self-limited epilepsy with Centro-Temporal Spikes (SeLECTS). Here, we explore this relationship and whether fluctuations in wakefulness influence the brain networks involved in CTS generation. Methods: Functional MRI (fMRI) and electroencephalography (EEG) was simultaneously acquired in 25 SeLECTS. A multispectral EEG index quantified drowsiness ('EWI': EEG Wakefulness Index). EEG (Pearson Correlation, Cross Correlation, Trend Estimation, Granger Causality) and fMRI (PPI: psychophysiological interactions) analytic approaches were adopted to explore respectively: (a) the relationship between EWI and changes in CTS frequency and (b) the functional connectivity of the networks involved in CTS generation and wakefulness oscillations. EEG analyses were repeated on a sample of routine EEG from the same patient's cohort. Results: No correlation was found between EWI fluctuations and CTS density during the EEG-fMRI recordings, while they showed an anticorrelated trend when drowsiness was followed by proper sleep in routine EEG traces. According to PPI findings, EWI fluctuations modulate the connectivity between the brain networks engaged by CTS and the left frontal operculum. Conclusions: While CTS frequency per se seems unrelated to drowsiness, wakefulness oscillations modulate the connectivity between CTS generators and key regions of the language circuitry, a cognitive function often impaired in SeLECTS. Significance: This work advances our understanding of (a) interaction between CTS occurrence and vigilance fluctuations and (b) possible mechanisms responsible for language disruption in SeLECTS.

The influence of wakefulness fluctuations on brain networks involved in centrotemporal spike occurrence / F. Talami, L. Lemieux, P. Avanzini, A. Ballerini, G. Cantalupo, H. Laufs, S. Meletti, A.E. Vaudano, P. Bergonzini, E. Caramaschi, M.P. Canevini, B.D. Bernardina, G. Gobbi, M. Filippini, G. Gessaroli, B. Piccolo, F. Pisani, M. Santucci, P. Veggiotti, A. Vignoli. - In: CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY. - ISSN 1388-2457. - 164:(2024 Aug), pp. 47-56. [10.1016/j.clinph.2024.05.005]

The influence of wakefulness fluctuations on brain networks involved in centrotemporal spike occurrence

M.P. Canevini;P. Veggiotti;A. Vignoli
2024

Abstract

Objective: Drowsiness has been implicated in the modulation of centro-temporal spikes (CTS) in Self-limited epilepsy with Centro-Temporal Spikes (SeLECTS). Here, we explore this relationship and whether fluctuations in wakefulness influence the brain networks involved in CTS generation. Methods: Functional MRI (fMRI) and electroencephalography (EEG) was simultaneously acquired in 25 SeLECTS. A multispectral EEG index quantified drowsiness ('EWI': EEG Wakefulness Index). EEG (Pearson Correlation, Cross Correlation, Trend Estimation, Granger Causality) and fMRI (PPI: psychophysiological interactions) analytic approaches were adopted to explore respectively: (a) the relationship between EWI and changes in CTS frequency and (b) the functional connectivity of the networks involved in CTS generation and wakefulness oscillations. EEG analyses were repeated on a sample of routine EEG from the same patient's cohort. Results: No correlation was found between EWI fluctuations and CTS density during the EEG-fMRI recordings, while they showed an anticorrelated trend when drowsiness was followed by proper sleep in routine EEG traces. According to PPI findings, EWI fluctuations modulate the connectivity between the brain networks engaged by CTS and the left frontal operculum. Conclusions: While CTS frequency per se seems unrelated to drowsiness, wakefulness oscillations modulate the connectivity between CTS generators and key regions of the language circuitry, a cognitive function often impaired in SeLECTS. Significance: This work advances our understanding of (a) interaction between CTS occurrence and vigilance fluctuations and (b) possible mechanisms responsible for language disruption in SeLECTS.
Drowsiness; EEG-fMRI; Functional connectivity; PPI; Self-limited epilepsies
Settore MED/39 - Neuropsichiatria Infantile
Settore MED/26 - Neurologia
ago-2024
7-giu-2024
Article (author)
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/1062192
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