AI Article Synopsis

  • The study looked at a serious kind of epilepsy called EIMFS that happens in babies and is linked to a gene mutation (KCNT1).
  • Researchers analyzed the brain activity of 7 EIMFS patients and compared it to another group with different early epilepsy types to find patterns in their seizures.
  • They discovered that EIMFS seizures mostly start in certain areas of the brain and have a specific way of spreading, which can help doctors diagnose EIMFS more accurately in the future.

Article Abstract

Objective: We aimed to characterize epilepsy of infancy with migrating focal seizures (EIMFS), a rare, severe early onset developmental epilepsy related to KCNT1 mutation, and to define specific electroencephalography (EEG) markers using EEG quantitative analysis. The ultimate goal would be to improve early diagnosis and to better understand seizure onset and propagation of EIMFS as compared to other early onset developmental epilepsy.

Methods: EEG of 7 EIMFS patients with KCNT1 mutations (115 seizures) and 17 patients with other early onset epilepsies (30 seizures) was included in this study. After detection of seizure onset and termination, spatiotemporal characteristics were quantified. Seizure propagation dynamics were analyzed using chronograms and phase coherence.

Results: In patients with EIMFS, seizures started and were localized predominantly in temporal and occipital areas, and evolved with a stable frequency (4-10 Hz). Inter- and intrahemispheric migrations were present in 60% of EIMFS seizures with high intraindividual reproducibility of temporospatial dynamics. Interhemispheric migrating seizures spread in 71% from temporal or occipital channels to the homologous contralateral ones, whereas intrahemispheric seizures involved mainly frontotemporal, temporal, and occipital channels. Causality links were present between ictal activities detected under different channels during migrating seizures. Finally, time delay index (based on delays between the different ictal onsets) and phase correlation index (based on coherence of ictal activities) allowed discrimination of EIMFS and non-EIMFS seizures with a specificity of 91.2% and a sensitivity of 84.4%.

Significance: We showed that the migrating pattern in EIMFS is not a random process, as suggested previously, and that it is a particular propagation pattern that follows the classical propagation pathways. It is notable that this study reveals specific EEG markers (time delay and phase correlation) accessible to visual evaluation, which will improve EIMFS diagnosis.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/epi.14605DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

eeg markers
12
early onset
12
temporal occipital
12
seizures
10
quantitative analysis
8
epilepsy infancy
8
infancy migrating
8
migrating focal
8
focal seizures
8
eimfs
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!