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Resected Brain Tissue, Seizure Onset Zone and Quantitative EEG Measures: Towards Prediction of Post-Surgical Seizure Control

BACKGROUND: Epilepsy surgery is a potentially curative treatment option for pharmacoresistent patients. If non-invasive methods alone do not allow to delineate the epileptogenic brain areas the surgical candidates undergo long-term monitoring with intracranial EEG. Visual EEG analysis is then used t...

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Autores principales: Rummel, Christian, Abela, Eugenio, Andrzejak, Ralph G., Hauf, Martinus, Pollo, Claudio, Müller, Markus, Weisstanner, Christian, Wiest, Roland, Schindler, Kaspar
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4626164/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26513359
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0141023
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author Rummel, Christian
Abela, Eugenio
Andrzejak, Ralph G.
Hauf, Martinus
Pollo, Claudio
Müller, Markus
Weisstanner, Christian
Wiest, Roland
Schindler, Kaspar
author_facet Rummel, Christian
Abela, Eugenio
Andrzejak, Ralph G.
Hauf, Martinus
Pollo, Claudio
Müller, Markus
Weisstanner, Christian
Wiest, Roland
Schindler, Kaspar
author_sort Rummel, Christian
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Epilepsy surgery is a potentially curative treatment option for pharmacoresistent patients. If non-invasive methods alone do not allow to delineate the epileptogenic brain areas the surgical candidates undergo long-term monitoring with intracranial EEG. Visual EEG analysis is then used to identify the seizure onset zone for targeted resection as a standard procedure. METHODS: Despite of its great potential to assess the epileptogenicty of brain tissue, quantitative EEG analysis has not yet found its way into routine clinical practice. To demonstrate that quantitative EEG may yield clinically highly relevant information we retrospectively investigated how post-operative seizure control is associated with four selected EEG measures evaluated in the resected brain tissue and the seizure onset zone. Importantly, the exact spatial location of the intracranial electrodes was determined by coregistration of pre-operative MRI and post-implantation CT and coregistration with post-resection MRI was used to delineate the extent of tissue resection. Using data-driven thresholding, quantitative EEG results were separated into normally contributing and salient channels. RESULTS: In patients with favorable post-surgical seizure control a significantly larger fraction of salient channels in three of the four quantitative EEG measures was resected than in patients with unfavorable outcome in terms of seizure control (median over the whole peri-ictal recordings). The same statistics revealed no association with post-operative seizure control when EEG channels contributing to the seizure onset zone were studied. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that quantitative EEG measures provide clinically relevant and objective markers of target tissue, which may be used to optimize epilepsy surgery. The finding that differentiation between favorable and unfavorable outcome was better for the fraction of salient values in the resected brain tissue than in the seizure onset zone is consistent with growing evidence that spatially extended networks might be more relevant for seizure generation, evolution and termination than a single highly localized brain region (i.e. a “focus”) where seizures start.
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spelling pubmed-46261642015-11-06 Resected Brain Tissue, Seizure Onset Zone and Quantitative EEG Measures: Towards Prediction of Post-Surgical Seizure Control Rummel, Christian Abela, Eugenio Andrzejak, Ralph G. Hauf, Martinus Pollo, Claudio Müller, Markus Weisstanner, Christian Wiest, Roland Schindler, Kaspar PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Epilepsy surgery is a potentially curative treatment option for pharmacoresistent patients. If non-invasive methods alone do not allow to delineate the epileptogenic brain areas the surgical candidates undergo long-term monitoring with intracranial EEG. Visual EEG analysis is then used to identify the seizure onset zone for targeted resection as a standard procedure. METHODS: Despite of its great potential to assess the epileptogenicty of brain tissue, quantitative EEG analysis has not yet found its way into routine clinical practice. To demonstrate that quantitative EEG may yield clinically highly relevant information we retrospectively investigated how post-operative seizure control is associated with four selected EEG measures evaluated in the resected brain tissue and the seizure onset zone. Importantly, the exact spatial location of the intracranial electrodes was determined by coregistration of pre-operative MRI and post-implantation CT and coregistration with post-resection MRI was used to delineate the extent of tissue resection. Using data-driven thresholding, quantitative EEG results were separated into normally contributing and salient channels. RESULTS: In patients with favorable post-surgical seizure control a significantly larger fraction of salient channels in three of the four quantitative EEG measures was resected than in patients with unfavorable outcome in terms of seizure control (median over the whole peri-ictal recordings). The same statistics revealed no association with post-operative seizure control when EEG channels contributing to the seizure onset zone were studied. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that quantitative EEG measures provide clinically relevant and objective markers of target tissue, which may be used to optimize epilepsy surgery. The finding that differentiation between favorable and unfavorable outcome was better for the fraction of salient values in the resected brain tissue than in the seizure onset zone is consistent with growing evidence that spatially extended networks might be more relevant for seizure generation, evolution and termination than a single highly localized brain region (i.e. a “focus”) where seizures start. Public Library of Science 2015-10-29 /pmc/articles/PMC4626164/ /pubmed/26513359 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0141023 Text en © 2015 Rummel et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Rummel, Christian
Abela, Eugenio
Andrzejak, Ralph G.
Hauf, Martinus
Pollo, Claudio
Müller, Markus
Weisstanner, Christian
Wiest, Roland
Schindler, Kaspar
Resected Brain Tissue, Seizure Onset Zone and Quantitative EEG Measures: Towards Prediction of Post-Surgical Seizure Control
title Resected Brain Tissue, Seizure Onset Zone and Quantitative EEG Measures: Towards Prediction of Post-Surgical Seizure Control
title_full Resected Brain Tissue, Seizure Onset Zone and Quantitative EEG Measures: Towards Prediction of Post-Surgical Seizure Control
title_fullStr Resected Brain Tissue, Seizure Onset Zone and Quantitative EEG Measures: Towards Prediction of Post-Surgical Seizure Control
title_full_unstemmed Resected Brain Tissue, Seizure Onset Zone and Quantitative EEG Measures: Towards Prediction of Post-Surgical Seizure Control
title_short Resected Brain Tissue, Seizure Onset Zone and Quantitative EEG Measures: Towards Prediction of Post-Surgical Seizure Control
title_sort resected brain tissue, seizure onset zone and quantitative eeg measures: towards prediction of post-surgical seizure control
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4626164/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26513359
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0141023
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