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Intracranially recorded interictal spikes: Relation to seizure onset area and effect of medication and time of day
Authors:Irina I Goncharova  Susan S Spencer  Robert B Duckrow  Lawrence J Hirsch  Dennis D Spencer  Hitten P Zaveri
Institution:1. Department of Neurology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT 06520, USA;2. Department of Neurosurgery, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT 06520, USA
Abstract:

Objective

The relationship between seizures and interictal spikes remains undetermined. We analyzed intracranial EEG (icEEG) recordings to examine the relationship between the seizure onset area and interictal spikes.

Methods

80 unselected patients were placed into 5 temporal, 4 extratemporal, and one unlocalized groups based on the location of the seizure onset area. We studied 4-h icEEG epochs, removed from seizures, from day-time and night-time during both on- and off-medication periods. Spikes were detected automatically from electrode contacts sampling the hemisphere ipsilateral to the seizure onset area.

Results

There was a widespread occurrence of spikes over the hemisphere ipsilateral to the seizure onset area. The spatial distributions of spike rates for the different patient groups were different (p < 0.0001, chi-square test). The area with the highest spike rate coincided with the seizure onset area only in half of the patients.

Conclusion

The spatial distribution of spike rates is strongly associated with the location of the seizure onset area, suggesting the presence of a distributed spike generation network, which is related to the seizure onset area.

Significance

The spatial distribution of spike rates, but not the area with the highest spike rate, may hold value for the localization of the seizure onset area.
Keywords:Temporal lobe epilepsy  Neocortical epilepsy  Seizure onset area  Intracranial monitoring  Sleep  Wake
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