Data mining neocortical high-frequency oscillations in epilepsy and controls.

Brain

Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, United States Naval Academy, Annapolis, MD 21402, USA.

Published: October 2011

AI Article Synopsis

  • Transient high-frequency oscillations (100-500 Hz) in the local field potential indicate increased ripple (100-250 Hz) and fast ripple (250-500 Hz) activity in the seizure-onset zone of mesial temporal lobe epilepsy, but less is known about these patterns in neocortical epilepsy and normal brains.
  • A comprehensive analysis using over 12 terabytes of continuous intracranial recordings from 9 neocortical epilepsy patients and 2 controls revealed that ripple oscillations are more prevalent in seizure-onset zones compared to fast ripples.
  • While controls and non-seizure-onset zones show similar rates of high-frequency oscillations, micro-electrode recordings yielded higher frequencies than surface electrodes, suggesting that

Article Abstract

Transient high-frequency (100-500 Hz) oscillations of the local field potential have been studied extensively in human mesial temporal lobe. Previous studies report that both ripple (100-250 Hz) and fast ripple (250-500 Hz) oscillations are increased in the seizure-onset zone of patients with mesial temporal lobe epilepsy. Comparatively little is known, however, about their spatial distribution with respect to seizure-onset zone in neocortical epilepsy, or their prevalence in normal brain. We present a quantitative analysis of high-frequency oscillations and their rates of occurrence in a group of nine patients with neocortical epilepsy and two control patients with no history of seizures. Oscillations were automatically detected and classified using an unsupervised approach in a data set of unprecedented volume in epilepsy research, over 12 terabytes of continuous long-term micro- and macro-electrode intracranial recordings, without human preprocessing, enabling selection-bias-free estimates of oscillation rates. There are three main results: (i) a cluster of ripple frequency oscillations with median spectral centroid = 137 Hz is increased in the seizure-onset zone more frequently than a cluster of fast ripple frequency oscillations (median spectral centroid = 305 Hz); (ii) we found no difference in the rates of high frequency oscillations in control neocortex and the non-seizure-onset zone neocortex of patients with epilepsy, despite the possibility of different underlying mechanisms of generation; and (iii) while previous studies have demonstrated that oscillations recorded by parenchyma-penetrating micro-electrodes have higher peak 100-500 Hz frequencies than penetrating macro-electrodes, this was not found for the epipial electrodes used here to record from the neocortical surface. We conclude that the relative rate of ripple frequency oscillations is a potential biomarker for epileptic neocortex, but that larger prospective studies correlating high-frequency oscillations rates with seizure-onset zone, resected tissue and surgical outcome are required to determine the true predictive value.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3187540PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awr212DOI Listing

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