Publications by authors named "Inati S"

Functional connectivity (FC) refers to the activation correlation between different brain regions. FC networks as typically represented as graphs with brain regions of interest (ROIs) as nodes and functional correlation as edges. Graph neural networks (GNNs) are machine learning architectures used to analyze FC graphs.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study explores how our brain coordinates different regions to remember everyday experiences and focuses on how short-term changes in brain connectivity impact episodic memory formation.
  • Using high-precision intracranial EEG, researchers examined the brain activity of 20 participants during a verbal memory task and identified strong correlations in functional connections.
  • The findings show that successful memory formation involves dynamic, sub-second changes in brain connectivity that are specific to each word pair and are also seen during memory retrieval.
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Neural coding has traditionally been examined through changes in firing rates and latencies in response to different stimuli. However, populations of neurons can also exhibit transient bursts of spiking activity, wherein neurons fire in a specific temporal order or sequence. The human brain may utilize these neuronal sequences within population bursts to efficiently represent information, thereby complementing the well-known neural code based on spike rate or latency.

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For patients with drug-resistant epilepsy, successful localization and surgical treatment of the epileptogenic zone (EZ) can bring seizure freedom. However, surgical success rates vary widely because there are currently no clinically validated biomarkers of the EZ. Highly epileptogenic regions often display increased levels of cortical excitability, which can be probed using single-pulse electrical stimulation (SPES), where brief pulses of electrical current are delivered to brain tissue.

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Epileptic seizures are debilitating because of the clinical symptoms they produce. These symptoms, in turn, may stem directly from disruptions in neural coding. Recent evidence has suggested that the specific temporal order, or sequence, of spiking across a population of cortical neurons may encode information.

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The blood-brain barrier (BBB) is a barrier protecting the brain and a milieu of continuous exchanges between blood and brain. There is emerging evidence that the BBB plays a major role in epileptogenesis and drug-resistant epilepsy, through several mechanisms, such as water homeostasis dysregulation, overexpression of drug transporters, and inflammation. Studies have shown abnormal water homeostasis in epileptic tissue and altered aquaporin-4 water channel expression in animal epilepsy models.

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Objective: A well-established bidirectional relationship exists between sleep and epilepsy. Patients with epilepsy tend to have less efficient sleep and shorter rapid eye movement (REM) sleep. Seizures are far more likely to arise from sleep transitions and non-REM sleep compared to REM sleep.

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-methyl-D-aspartate receptors (NMDARs) are crucial for neuronal development and synaptic plasticity. Dysfunction of NMDARs is associated with multiple neurodevelopmental disorders, including epilepsy, autism spectrum disorder, and intellectual disability. Understanding the impact of genetic variants of NMDAR subunits can shed light on the mechanisms of disease.

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Seizures occur in up to 59% of boys with creatine transporter deficiency (CTD). While seizure phenotypes have been previously described, electroencephalogram (EEG) findings have only been reported in several case reports. In this prospective observational study, we report seizure characteristics and EEG findings in combination with neurobehavioral and SLC6A8 pathogenic variants in twenty males with CTD.

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Tumor-related epilepsy (TRE) is a frequent and major consequence of brain tumors. Management of TRE is required throughout the course of disease and a deep understanding of diagnosis and treatment is key to improving quality of life. Gross total resection is favored from both an oncologic and epilepsy perspective.

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Sequences of spiking activity have been heavily implicated as potential substrates of memory formation and retrieval across many species. A parallel line of recent evidence also asserts that sequential activity may arise from and be constrained by pre-existing network structure. Here we reconcile these two lines of research in the human brain by measuring single unit spiking sequences in the temporal lobe cortex as participants perform an episodic memory task.

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Interictal epileptiform discharges have been shown to propagate from focal epileptogenic sources as travelling waves or through more rapid white matter conduction. We hypothesize that both modes of propagation are necessary to explain interictal discharge timing delays. We propose a method that, for the first time, incorporates both propagation modes to identify unique potential sources of interictal activity.

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Microstimulation can modulate the activity of individual neurons to affect behavior, but the effects of stimulation on neuronal spiking are complex and remain poorly understood. This is especially challenging in the human brain where the response properties of individual neurons are sparse and heterogeneous. Here we use microelectrode arrays in the human anterior temporal lobe in 6 participants (3 female) to examine the spiking responses of individual neurons to microstimulation delivered through multiple distinct stimulation sites.

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Purpose: Non-invasive imaging studies play a critical role in the presurgical evaluation of patients with drug-resistant temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE), particularly in helping to lateralize the seizure focus. Arterial Spin Labeling (ASL) MRI has been widely used to non-invasively study cerebral blood flow (CBF), with somewhat variable interictal alterations reported in TLE. Here, we compare temporal lobe subregional interictal perfusion and symmetry in lesional (MRI+) and non-lesional (MRI-) TLE compared to healthy volunteers (HVs).

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This scientific commentary refers to ‘Thalamostriatal disconnection underpins long-term seizure freedom in frontal lobe epilepsy surgery’ by Giampiccolo (https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awad085).

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The quality of short-term memory (STM) underlies our ability to recall the exact details of a recent event, yet how the human brain enables this core cognitive function remains poorly understood. Here we use multiple experimental approaches to test the hypothesis that the quality of STM, such as its precision or fidelity, relies on the medial temporal lobe (MTL), a region commonly associated with the ability to distinguish similar information remembered in long-term memory. First, with intracranial recordings, we find that delay-period MTL activity retains item-specific STM content that is predictive of subsequent recall precision.

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While seizure activity may be electrographically widespread, increasing evidence has suggested that ictal discharges may in fact represent travelling waves propagated from a focal seizure source. Interictal epileptiform discharges (IEDs) are an electrographic manifestation of excessive hypersynchronization of cortical activity that occur between seizures and are considered a marker of potentially epileptogenic tissue. The precise relationship between brain regions demonstrating IEDs and those involved in seizure onset, however, remains poorly understood.

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Recent studies suggest that changes in neuronal metabolism are associated with epilepsy. High rates of ATP depletion, lactate dehydrogenase A and lactate production have all been found in epilepsy patients, animal and tissue culture models. As such, it can be hypothesized that chronic seizures lead to continuing elevations in neuronal energy demand which may lead to an adapted metabolic response and elevations of lactate dehydrogenase A.

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Background And Objectives: Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection can cause a wide range of neurologic complications; however, its neuropenetrance during the acute phase of the illness is unknown.

Methods: Extracellular vesicles were isolated from brain biopsy tissue from a patient undergoing epilepsy surgery using ultracentrifugation and analyzed by Western blot and qPCR for the presence of virus protein and RNA, respectively. Biopsy tissue was assessed by immunohistochemistry for the presence of microvascular damage and compared with 3 other non-COVID surgical epilepsy brain tissues.

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Over 15 million epilepsy patients worldwide have drug-resistant epilepsy. Successful surgery is a standard of care treatment but can only be achieved through complete resection or disconnection of the epileptogenic zone, the brain region(s) where seizures originate. Surgical success rates vary between 20% and 80%, because no clinically validated biological markers of the epileptogenic zone exist.

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The sensory cortices of many mammals are often organized into modules in the form of cortical columns, yet whether modular organization at this spatial scale is a general property of the human neocortex is unknown. The strongest evidence for modularity arises when measures of connectivity, structure, and function converge. Here we use microelectrode recordings in humans to examine functional connectivity and neuronal spiking responses in order to assess modularity in submillimeter scale networks.

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Article Synopsis
  • The cause of nodding syndrome is still unknown, and there's limited genetic and phenotypic data on patients.
  • Researchers studied a family from Uganda to analyze the condition's characteristics, possible causes, and response to immunotherapy, with three out of eight family members affected.
  • Various tests, including genetic sequencing and brain imaging, revealed signs of brain damage, mild metal buildup, and some viral presence, but no clear genetic cause or active infections were found in the patients.
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Object repetition commonly leads to long-lasting improvements in identification speed and accuracy, a behavioral facilitation referred to as "repetition priming". Neuroimaging and non-invasive electromagnetic stimulation studies have most often implicated the involvement of left lateral frontal cortex in repetition priming, although convergent evidence from neuropsychological studies is lacking. In the current study, we examine the impact of surgical resection for the treatment of epilepsy on the magnitude of repetition priming at relatively short-term (30-60 min delay) and long-term (3 months) delays in 41 patients with varying seizure foci and resection locations.

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