Posted By: NITRC ADMIN - Dec 31, 2017 Tool/Resource: Journals
Detecting sub-second changes in brain activation patterns during interictal epileptic spike using simultaneous EEG-fMRI. Clin Neurophysiol. 2017 Nov 27;129(2):377-389 Authors: Bagarinao E, Maesawa S, Ito Y, Usui N, Natsume J, Watanabe H, Hoshiyama M, Wakabayashi T, Sobue G, Naganawa S, Isoda H Abstract OBJECTIVE: Epileptic spikes are associated with rapidly changing brain activation involving the epileptic foci and other brain regions in the "epileptic network". We aim to resolve these activation changes using simultaneous electroencephalography (EEG) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) recordings. METHODS: Simultaneous EEG-fMRI recordings from 9 patients with epilepsy were used in the analysis. Our method employed the whole scalp EEG data to generate regressors for the analysis of fMRI data using the general linear model. RESULTS: We were able to resolve, with milliseconds temporal resolution, changes in activation patterns involving suspected epileptic foci and other brain regions in the epileptic network during spike and slow wave. Using summary maps (called SSWAS maps) which show the activation frequency of voxels, we found that suspected epileptic foci tend to be significantly active during this interval. SSWAS maps also enabled the detection of the epileptic foci in 4 of 5 patients where the conventional event-timing-based analysis failed to identify. CONCLUSION: These findings demonstrated the efficacy of the method and the potential application of SSWAS maps to identify epileptic foci. SIGNIFICANCE: The method could help resolve activation changes during epileptic spike and could provide insights into the underlying pathophysiology of these changes. PMID: 29288994 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Link to Original Article |
You can link this page to your Slack channel. When you do this, every new posting on this NITRC page will trigger a short message on your Slack channel linking to the update. If you have the RSS App installed in your Slack workspace, you can paste this slash command directly into your channel:
/feed https://www.nitrc.org/export/rss20_forum.php?forum_id=8130
Full instructions for installing and using the RSS app with Slack feed to Slack can be found in the Slack Help Center.
This news item currently has no comments.