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Respiratory-related brain pulsations are increased in epilepsy—a two-centre functional MRI study

Resting-state functional MRI has shown potential for detecting changes in cerebral blood oxygen level-dependent signal in patients with epilepsy, even in the absence of epileptiform activity. Furthermore, it has been suggested that coefficient of variation mapping of fast functional MRI signal may p...

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Autores principales: Kananen, Janne, Helakari, Heta, Korhonen, Vesa, Huotari, Niko, Järvelä, Matti, Raitamaa, Lauri, Raatikainen, Ville, Rajna, Zalan, Tuovinen, Timo, Nedergaard, Maiken, Jacobs, Julia, LeVan, Pierre, Ansakorpi, Hanna, Kiviniemi, Vesa
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7472909/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32954328
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/braincomms/fcaa076
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author Kananen, Janne
Helakari, Heta
Korhonen, Vesa
Huotari, Niko
Järvelä, Matti
Raitamaa, Lauri
Raatikainen, Ville
Rajna, Zalan
Tuovinen, Timo
Nedergaard, Maiken
Jacobs, Julia
LeVan, Pierre
Ansakorpi, Hanna
Kiviniemi, Vesa
author_facet Kananen, Janne
Helakari, Heta
Korhonen, Vesa
Huotari, Niko
Järvelä, Matti
Raitamaa, Lauri
Raatikainen, Ville
Rajna, Zalan
Tuovinen, Timo
Nedergaard, Maiken
Jacobs, Julia
LeVan, Pierre
Ansakorpi, Hanna
Kiviniemi, Vesa
author_sort Kananen, Janne
collection PubMed
description Resting-state functional MRI has shown potential for detecting changes in cerebral blood oxygen level-dependent signal in patients with epilepsy, even in the absence of epileptiform activity. Furthermore, it has been suggested that coefficient of variation mapping of fast functional MRI signal may provide a powerful tool for the identification of intrinsic brain pulsations in neurological diseases such as dementia, stroke and epilepsy. In this study, we used fast functional MRI sequence (magnetic resonance encephalography) to acquire ten whole-brain images per second. We used the functional MRI data to compare physiological brain pulsations between healthy controls (n = 102) and patients with epilepsy (n = 33) and furthermore to drug-naive seizure patients (n = 9). Analyses were performed by calculating coefficient of variation and spectral power in full band and filtered sub-bands. Brain pulsations in the respiratory-related frequency sub-band (0.11–0.51 Hz) were significantly (P < 0.05) increased in patients with epilepsy, with an increase in both signal variance and power. At the individual level, over 80% of medicated and drug-naive seizure patients exhibited areas of abnormal brain signal power that correlated well with the known clinical diagnosis, while none of the controls showed signs of abnormality with the same threshold. The differences were most apparent in the basal brain structures, respiratory centres of brain stem, midbrain and temporal lobes. Notably, full-band, very low frequency (0.01–0.1 Hz) and cardiovascular (0.8–1.76 Hz) brain pulses showed no differences between groups. This study extends and confirms our previous results of abnormal fast functional MRI signal variance in epilepsy patients. Only respiratory-related brain pulsations were clearly increased with no changes in either physiological cardiorespiratory rates or head motion between the subjects. The regional alterations in brain pulsations suggest that mechanisms driving the cerebrospinal fluid homeostasis may be altered in epilepsy. Magnetic resonance encephalography has both increased sensitivity and high specificity for detecting the increased brain pulsations, particularly in times when other tools for locating epileptogenic areas remain inconclusive.
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spelling pubmed-74729092020-09-17 Respiratory-related brain pulsations are increased in epilepsy—a two-centre functional MRI study Kananen, Janne Helakari, Heta Korhonen, Vesa Huotari, Niko Järvelä, Matti Raitamaa, Lauri Raatikainen, Ville Rajna, Zalan Tuovinen, Timo Nedergaard, Maiken Jacobs, Julia LeVan, Pierre Ansakorpi, Hanna Kiviniemi, Vesa Brain Commun Original Article Resting-state functional MRI has shown potential for detecting changes in cerebral blood oxygen level-dependent signal in patients with epilepsy, even in the absence of epileptiform activity. Furthermore, it has been suggested that coefficient of variation mapping of fast functional MRI signal may provide a powerful tool for the identification of intrinsic brain pulsations in neurological diseases such as dementia, stroke and epilepsy. In this study, we used fast functional MRI sequence (magnetic resonance encephalography) to acquire ten whole-brain images per second. We used the functional MRI data to compare physiological brain pulsations between healthy controls (n = 102) and patients with epilepsy (n = 33) and furthermore to drug-naive seizure patients (n = 9). Analyses were performed by calculating coefficient of variation and spectral power in full band and filtered sub-bands. Brain pulsations in the respiratory-related frequency sub-band (0.11–0.51 Hz) were significantly (P < 0.05) increased in patients with epilepsy, with an increase in both signal variance and power. At the individual level, over 80% of medicated and drug-naive seizure patients exhibited areas of abnormal brain signal power that correlated well with the known clinical diagnosis, while none of the controls showed signs of abnormality with the same threshold. The differences were most apparent in the basal brain structures, respiratory centres of brain stem, midbrain and temporal lobes. Notably, full-band, very low frequency (0.01–0.1 Hz) and cardiovascular (0.8–1.76 Hz) brain pulses showed no differences between groups. This study extends and confirms our previous results of abnormal fast functional MRI signal variance in epilepsy patients. Only respiratory-related brain pulsations were clearly increased with no changes in either physiological cardiorespiratory rates or head motion between the subjects. The regional alterations in brain pulsations suggest that mechanisms driving the cerebrospinal fluid homeostasis may be altered in epilepsy. Magnetic resonance encephalography has both increased sensitivity and high specificity for detecting the increased brain pulsations, particularly in times when other tools for locating epileptogenic areas remain inconclusive. Oxford University Press 2020-06-08 /pmc/articles/PMC7472909/ /pubmed/32954328 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/braincomms/fcaa076 Text en © The Author(s) (2020). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Original Article
Kananen, Janne
Helakari, Heta
Korhonen, Vesa
Huotari, Niko
Järvelä, Matti
Raitamaa, Lauri
Raatikainen, Ville
Rajna, Zalan
Tuovinen, Timo
Nedergaard, Maiken
Jacobs, Julia
LeVan, Pierre
Ansakorpi, Hanna
Kiviniemi, Vesa
Respiratory-related brain pulsations are increased in epilepsy—a two-centre functional MRI study
title Respiratory-related brain pulsations are increased in epilepsy—a two-centre functional MRI study
title_full Respiratory-related brain pulsations are increased in epilepsy—a two-centre functional MRI study
title_fullStr Respiratory-related brain pulsations are increased in epilepsy—a two-centre functional MRI study
title_full_unstemmed Respiratory-related brain pulsations are increased in epilepsy—a two-centre functional MRI study
title_short Respiratory-related brain pulsations are increased in epilepsy—a two-centre functional MRI study
title_sort respiratory-related brain pulsations are increased in epilepsy—a two-centre functional mri study
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7472909/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32954328
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/braincomms/fcaa076
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