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Increased Functional MEG Connectivity As a Hallmark of MRI-Negative Focal and Generalized Epilepsy

Overview
Journal Brain Topogr
Specialty Neurology
Date 2018 May 17
PMID 29766384
Citations 22
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Abstract

Epilepsy is one of the most prevalent neurological diseases with a high morbidity. Accumulating evidence has shown that epilepsy is an archetypical neural network disorder. Here we developed a non-invasive cortical functional connectivity analysis based on magnetoencephalography (MEG) to assess commonalities and differences in the network phenotype in different epilepsy syndromes (non-lesional/cryptogenic focal and idiopathic/genetic generalized epilepsy). Thirty-seven epilepsy patients with normal structural brain anatomy underwent a 30-min resting state MEG measurement with eyes closed. We only analyzed interictal epochs without epileptiform discharges. The imaginary part of coherency was calculated as an indicator of cortical functional connectivity in five classical frequency bands. This connectivity measure was computed between all sources on individually reconstructed cortical surfaces that were surface-aligned to a common template. In comparison to healthy controls, both focal and generalized epilepsy patients showed widespread increased functional connectivity in several frequency bands, demonstrating the potential of elevated functional connectivity as a common pathophysiological hallmark in different epilepsy types. Furthermore, the comparison between focal and generalized epilepsies revealed increased network connectivity in bilateral mesio-frontal and motor regions specifically for the generalized epilepsy patients. Our study indicated that the surface-based normalization of MEG sources of individual brains enables the comparison of imaging findings across subjects and groups on a united platform, which leads to a straightforward and effective disclosure of pathological network characteristics in epilepsy. This approach may allow for the definition of more specific markers of different epilepsy syndromes, and increased MEG-based resting-state functional connectivity seems to be a common feature in MRI-negative epilepsy syndromes.

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